<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?><rss xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:openSearch="http://a9.com/-/spec/opensearchrss/1.0/" xmlns:blogger="http://schemas.google.com/blogger/2008" xmlns:georss="http://www.georss.org/georss" xmlns:gd="http://schemas.google.com/g/2005" xmlns:thr="http://purl.org/syndication/thread/1.0" version="2.0"><channel><atom:id>tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839</atom:id><lastBuildDate>Thu, 24 Oct 2024 15:31:18 +0000</lastBuildDate><title>KellieKetcham/AdvancingBackward</title><description>Common sense with curiosity and good advice with crazy hair</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/</link><managingEditor>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</managingEditor><generator>Blogger</generator><openSearch:totalResults>277</openSearch:totalResults><openSearch:startIndex>1</openSearch:startIndex><openSearch:itemsPerPage>25</openSearch:itemsPerPage><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-5863482875309573483</guid><pubDate>Thu, 10 Oct 2013 03:03:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-10-09T22:03:15.960-05:00</atom:updated><title>Gun Play</title><description> I live in a community. I live in a townhouse surrounded by families with small children. These small children, grade school age see me every morning, day and night. Since I work from home, I am everywhere all the time. I am the middle aged woman who keeps watch over the extended yard that reaches so many doors in our community. I am the one who is sitting out in the evening watching the children play. I am the one they look to for guidance about rules of fair play and decorum. I am there. I feel their need, their want to be seen, and their desire to entertain and keep my attention. I feel these little ones to my bone. They have worked hard to earn my trust and respect. They address me as Miss Kellie. They have a million questions about school, friends, families, children, adults, and life in general and more often than that, the very specific. These children are my little friends; actually, they are my littlest of friends. I call them friends because they talk to me without judgment, or condemnation, or indifference, which I think is often much worse. In the evening when they have grown tired of playing they come to me and sit or stand near my tiny outdoor table and talk. Not one of them looks anything like me, but we don’t notice, except to ask about each other in fascination. They are careful to be respectful at all times. They try and watch their grammar, which I occasionally correct, but as a method of teaching and not to condescend. I think they are gorgeous. I hear them and what they have to say and I am riveted to their mind set, their opinions are articulated in a way that captures my heart. They know I adore them. It is in the way I look at them, full in their tiny faces, eyes held in interest and kindness. 
We have had a couple of odd happenings here at townhouse land, but nothing as violent as what happened last night. There are apartments across the very busy street we live on. These apartments are known to carry certain elements of danger. We are all advised to stay from them, and we do. Last evening my young ones were once again gathered at my table regaling me tales with the horrors of dodge ball. One by one they got called in by their parents in order to get ready for bed. The sun had fallen far behind the trees and the sky was dark. My favorite little friend is a writer and a good one at that. She is expressive and artful with her words. I see that we are kindred spirits and our souls connect. She offers up her writings to me to critique, but I can’t say anything bad about any of them. I love the way she writes, and see her one day becoming prolific and important. I gathered my coffee cup and headed in for the night. The yard, the area that borders our doors grew quiet as the families began tucking in the little ones. Peace had descended over our little community. 
Christy, my oldest child, and I were watching television. Mike had gone to bed, exhausted from work.  Our patio door remained open to allow the breeze to waft into our living room and cool the air. Christy had gone upstairs for moment and I was sitting there when I heard something outside. I muted the television as I do every time I think I hear something and there it was the sound I knew and feared. Pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, POP! A man yelled, “Call an ambulance!”
Gunfire had found our little community. I hurriedly called 911 and reported what I had heard, but I saw nothing. The sounds came from up on the hill in the parking lot, a place I could not see from my windows. Mike came downstairs and closed and locked the patio door. I had walked outside to see what was going on. Mike called to me in a loud whisper, “Baby, get back in the house.” My neighbor, a young mother of two was coming home from work. Me, standing in my pajama pants, she asked, “Did I scare you?”  I look at her and said, “No, there were gun shots. The police are on their way.” She and I stood for moment when a man screamed, “Get back in the house! Get back in the house!” My neighbor and I scurried into our doors. People closed doors and locked them, pulled blinds, we hid away, waiting for the trauma to exit. I went upstairs to investigate from the window on the second floor. Christy chided me for being so “nosy” and laughed, “You are not Angela Lansbury, you are not going to solve this.” For a moment we forgot about the danger of the situation and just laughed. I looked out my window to the windows of my small friends. Their lights were out and I prayed they didn’t hear what we had heard. I prayed they got to keep their innocence a little longer.
I found out today a man was shot 3 times. He had been found at the other end of the community and had survived. I don’t know anything else about the shooting that occurred so close to my front door.  I really don’t want to know the details right now. I am leaning away from knowing too much and having the fear grow inside me. 
This evening my little friends were back out playing. They seem to be called in earlier tonight. They were playing soccer, running around each other, laughing and horsing around.  All their small children noises were echoing where gun shots had just ringed out hours earlier. I wondered if they knew about the incident. I wondered if they knew and were frightened. I’m frightened. I scared for friends who still lead with their tiny hearts, who think why not instead of asking why. My hope for tonight for them was that innocence won out today. We live in extraordinary times, and not all of this is a good thing. The world has grown dark and violent for many. I see on the news nightly the body count due to the many, many murders in our area. The weapons of choice are guns, lots and lots of guns. Today I posted the need for responsible gun owners to stand up and speak out on gun violence. It’s time for the NRA and its members to talk, and keep talking about how we are going to fix this mess. They have the large looming lobby, worth millions of dollars and several members of Congress. They need to come up with information on how to help. As experts in the area of this kind of weaponry it is their obligation. I literally have to say do it for the children, for my children that I adore so much, having spent so much time. This needs a solution before another stray bullet ends the life of a child or a middle aged story teller.


&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKvu-L5PLFC6aGEP83PhD_i6nFLBv731LBjbitmn2nPcNrfPGW-PSHUwrG7mdWriaxpI1Ei_eUB_Mxde_mURk132LOUb52YWIezzNEDzkyUd4R-MJRe6_FGg2el1BKnpkOMZxNgiKsx4s/s1600/Trees.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; &gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKvu-L5PLFC6aGEP83PhD_i6nFLBv731LBjbitmn2nPcNrfPGW-PSHUwrG7mdWriaxpI1Ei_eUB_Mxde_mURk132LOUb52YWIezzNEDzkyUd4R-MJRe6_FGg2el1BKnpkOMZxNgiKsx4s/s320/Trees.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/10/gun-play.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgKvu-L5PLFC6aGEP83PhD_i6nFLBv731LBjbitmn2nPcNrfPGW-PSHUwrG7mdWriaxpI1Ei_eUB_Mxde_mURk132LOUb52YWIezzNEDzkyUd4R-MJRe6_FGg2el1BKnpkOMZxNgiKsx4s/s72-c/Trees.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-4184653428199696646</guid><pubDate>Tue, 08 Oct 2013 13:58:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-10-08T08:58:38.253-05:00</atom:updated><title>Pigotry</title><description>I had read the three little pigs to my children a million times when they were young. For me the story of the three little pigs represented the best analogy of why hard work was important. Earning one’s way in life, was a value I continue to teach my now grown children.  After my medical arrest, I found myself not being able to read and write for a period of time. I had gotten home from the hospital with the new, very fragile baby, wanting to continue to try and have some kind “normalcy”. When bedtime came, the older kids pulled books for me to read. Determined, I open the pages and began to stammer and struggle my way through it. My memory was toast, but I could remember some of the stories by heart, so instead of actually reading the written words, I would tell the story, prompted by the pictures, as my anxious audience sat at the foot of the bed. One of the first nights I was home from the hospital, I was tucking my wee ones into bed. One of the boys pulled the story about the three little pigs from the pile of books in the corner of the room. I could remember the basics of the story, but the words in front of me seemed blurred, unrecognizable. I wanted to break down and cry. I wanted to curl into a ball and fall spectacularly apart, but my wee ones, so dependent on me, sat there in anticipation of having the mama they had known read to them. There is no way to explain that the mama they had known didn’t exist anymore, and might not ever come back. I had been altered. My brain didn’t work the way it used to. My thoughts at that time were a jumbled mess, and my memory had become an escape artist, leaving and reappearing on a whim.
I sat holding the book in my hands. Looking at the first page trying desperately to find any word I knew. My oldest child, Christy, a girl with striking blond hair and eyes so big and blue they held the sky, was watching me. I continued to struggle to start the story. I could not find the words in my mind or on the pages. I began to tremble, fearful that I would never recover, and that my days of reading to my children were over. Christy came up to me on her knees, and gently laid her hands on mine.  “Mama, I have been practicing reading. Can I read the story tonight? I know all the words.”  I looked at my child, her face so sincere, so wanting to help me out my perplexing situation. Her face offered no judgment; just some much needed and appreciated help.  “Sure”, I said and handed my little girl the book. She took my seat on the bed and I proceeded to kneel on the floor at her feet. The boys and I sat as she opened the book and began to read. Christy told us the story of the three little pigs that night and when she finished, I hugged her so tight, she needed to break for air. She looked deep into my face, holding my cheeks in her tiny hands. “It’s going to be O.K., Mama. You are just tired. I can help.” I nodded and walked her to her room and tucked her in. As I kissed her, I realized how lucky I was to just be there, in the flesh, putting her to bed. I had not felt so lucky earlier. I had felt frustrated and angry at my inability to be the person I once was.
I had no way of knowing when I conceived my last child things were going to be so hard.  Birthing a child had seemed like the least of my worries, right up until I got my diagnosis that nearly ended my life. Years later when their father was diagnosed with cancer, there was no way of knowing that, either. We had started out as a nice middle class family, building a life, having children, creating home together. As a single mother I continued to live like the little pig with the brick house, working as many jobs as my body could stand, making what I could not buy, building what we needed, trying as hard as I could to do as much as I could for the wee ones I loved so very much. I had pushed myself to the brink, just so we could survive. My children had encountered people who judged them severely for being poor, for not having a father around, for being heartbroken and grieving. They had seen what I like to refer to as the fourth little pig, Pigotry. Pigotry is the pig who selfishly condescends to those who are in need. Pigotry demands the best of everything, and insults anything less. Pigotry is judgmental, mean spirited, and entirely selfish. Pigotry is the person who thinks because they have never encountered such hardships that those who have, deserve to be treated badly. Pigotry is evil.
I had never wanted my children to see those Pigotry people so early in their lives. Parents try their level best to keep that dirty little secret to themselves until their children are older, but I had no choice but make the introduction, so my children didn’t think what Pigotry did was acceptable behavior. Pigotry could appear in the form of someone once considered safe. Pigotry showed up in the shape of a mom who refused to enter my house because we were poor, and then went about telling others how we lived. Pigotry came to a soccer meet in the form a dad, who bullied my son, until I stepped in. I could see in his eyes, the pure contempt for me and my son. Pigotry came to open houses at school, children parties, charity events for the school, and even church, sitting right next to us in the pew. Pigotry seemed to crop up when we felt most exposed.  
Recently, my oldest girl, the one who continues to have her flowing blond hair and deep blue eyes, encountered Pigotry again. While debating politics someone wrote that people, who could not afford to have four children, shouldn’t have them. It made her so angry.  I saw the fury in face; I saw her wheels turn, as her mind searched for how she would respond. Believe me, I am not fighting her battle for her.  She can handle herself quite well, thank you very much. There is no need for me to step in for my children anymore. They are wicked smart, and if you underestimate them, well, God help you, because the rest of us will be stepping away for our own safety. My children have seen the best and worst in people. They now fight for those who need help and have no voice. They are caring, compassionate, empathetic people who lead with their heart. Pigotry, taught them how to treat people with kindness. That was the take away from the horrible experiences of meeting Pigotry early in life that it never has to be that way. Pigotry took a big hit yesterday from my oldest child. About once a week a child calls home to tell the story of battling Pigotry in the name of creating a better world. While I will always hold the original three little pigs close to my heart, the fourth pig, Pigotry, would be better served as a ham sandwich. 


&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBps3EZsDBrWqTlhyphenhyphenU4bcr-odHSJfsV6QljuzBnPEe-Rh4R9Yz4SAaZh2qMPUY-mXaFWkK1cHRHvnoFhDqBZqir67ynv8qyGZxMsazei9ON55QSv53MJs6XY0EGrX9Ah4oR7e4svhk7KY/s1600/Piggy.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBps3EZsDBrWqTlhyphenhyphenU4bcr-odHSJfsV6QljuzBnPEe-Rh4R9Yz4SAaZh2qMPUY-mXaFWkK1cHRHvnoFhDqBZqir67ynv8qyGZxMsazei9ON55QSv53MJs6XY0EGrX9Ah4oR7e4svhk7KY/s320/Piggy.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;



</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/10/i-had-read-three-little-pigs-to-my.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgBps3EZsDBrWqTlhyphenhyphenU4bcr-odHSJfsV6QljuzBnPEe-Rh4R9Yz4SAaZh2qMPUY-mXaFWkK1cHRHvnoFhDqBZqir67ynv8qyGZxMsazei9ON55QSv53MJs6XY0EGrX9Ah4oR7e4svhk7KY/s72-c/Piggy.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-3184986984863910547</guid><pubDate>Sat, 05 Oct 2013 15:19:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-10-05T10:19:47.200-05:00</atom:updated><title>Just Check the Box</title><description>I was filling out another job application, when my frustration grew to a boiling point. It seems every time I am required to fill out an application I have trouble trying to decipher how to input my information. Either there is not enough room, since I am now a woman of a certain age and experience, I need a looser, roomier platform, and these applications never have enough, yet, want me to describe in detail my life, for the last fifty years. 
Oh, sure, it sounds easy enough, just fill out the application. Just fill in the box. Michael never wants to be in the same room with me when I fill out these brain teasing, exasperating, mind traps. He runs, sometimes literally calling out that he just wants to go for a short jog. I won’t see him again until dinner. I don’t blame him. Each designated day I have for job searching, I make it cuss day. My cuss days are a little more often these days, but it is my purposeful, designated day to let my mouth fly. I try to watch my “P”s and “Q”s, but on application day, I don’t have the restraint. I am hunched over my keyboard, screaming at the page that just changed before I could finish typing, or grabbing my screen with both hands shaking it, trying to get the appropriate box to tumble down as if it were an Etch a Sketch. I miss paper. I miss the days when I was viewed as an adult and my cover letter, resume and recommendation letters were enough information for me to get an interview. I often feel these applications suffer from ageism. I am being set up to fail.  A few years ago I was sitting at a kiosk in Walmart trying to apply for a job. The screens came up and if I had been 16 years old without any education or job experience, it may have been a bit easier, although my grown kids have assured me they had trouble with it also, but as an older person who has a long list of educational institutions, licenses, multiple career changes, yeah, I wanted to do myself and that machine harm. I nearly broke down into tears right there in the layaway department.
The only other time checking boxes was tough for me was back right after Danny, my first husband died. I was filling out forms when I got stumped. Technically, I knew the answer they wanted, but emotionally, I felt it diminished where I was in my life. The boxes were: Single, Married, Divorced, Widowed. Here is why I got stuck, I was single in that I was alone. Danny had died and the kids and I were struggling to find a way to live without him. I could not have felt more single at that time. We were isolated, and very much alone, so I felt justified if I checked single. The married box was next and I stared at it. Danny and I were no longer married, but we had four children together and a sticky relationship that kept throwing each of us back at each other. Neither of us had really ever let go, so married, was how I had felt, even when we lived apart. Divorced, came next in the line of boxes. Yep, I was divorced. It was a word I hated, an act I despised, and yet there I was, divorced all the way to the bone. Divorce for me meant failure, it meant weakness, and shame. I still wince when people refer to my divorce. I had not filed for it, I did not witness the finality of it, and I carried all the shame of my failed marriage. Divorced is the box I had checked for a couple of years and I hated it more every time I checked it. The last box was Widowed. I sat shaking when I got to that box, holding on to the form, disfiguring it in my hands, as tears fell. With Danny gone and now residing in a fresh grave for me to visit weekly as self punishment, and I was really good at punishing myself for every misstep he or I had, I was now widowed. Since we weren’t legally married anymore, I knew I could never check that box, but I felt as though I deserved it. My partner in parenting was gone. The guy I shared my family with was no longer in my life or in my children’s lives. There was no more hoping that somehow he and I could work things out. He was dead, I was alone, and our kids’ hearts were completely shattered. I deserved a box specific for me. My family in that time was not a one size fits all. I know in my heart, every family has something about them that should allow them a special box.
I need a special box right now. I need a box that shows I am flexible, intelligent and experienced. I need a box that disregards age and holds time in a state of reverence. I need a box that indicates I am loyal, hard working and affable. I need a “Hey, listen, I know I am from out of town, and I may not have the college education that you so desire, but I am willing to learn anything” box. I need that box. 
With all the forms, applications and sundry paperwork I have had to fill out since I moved, one would think there would be some kind of universal method for providing information to all who require it. I believe it was called a resume, but don’t quote me on that. When I worked as a nurse we used to fill out information longhand. We had to, because no one patient was exactly the same. Medicine had that part right. They allowed for all the idiosyncratic things about being human. My applications often make me feel so much less than human. The way I have to reduce myself down to a two dimensional, no less than two pages, but no more than three, description of justifying my life, makes me feel despondent. I know I am in a large company of folks out there who are in much worse situations than I am. Nearly daily, I type my most basic information into the boxes and then wait to hear anything back. Most jobs never respond. It is as if I had tossed all my personal information into a black hole in the universe where my chances of even being seen are a lightning strike. I haven’t given up. I didn’t the last time I was in this situation and I won’t now.  My Michael and friends love and support me by saying, “They just don’t know what they missing out on.” I nod my head in agreement, but wonder if the storm I am in will produce a one in a million lightning strike, I think I need. 
I believe in “All things for a reason”. I think I believe that because if my history has taught me anything, it is to wait for all the crazy to shake out. My daughter, a sage and wise soul said, “Mom, you know how it is for us, things always get really bad, right before they get really good.” She’s right, and I know where her understanding comes from, although, I admit when my kids use my own words back at me, I cringe. It is how things have always gone; they get really bad, right before they get really good. Darkest before the dawn is a theory that is right on the money. My hope for now is to not lose my sense of humor, my sense of adventure and my common sense where I know if I can just hold on, things will really work out for the better.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/10/just-check-box.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-5790984483494320965</guid><pubDate>Mon, 30 Sep 2013 08:33:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-09-30T03:33:06.221-05:00</atom:updated><title>Gap Year</title><description>I was spending time thinking of what I had done in the past decade. I was trying to account for all the years and the days and even the minutes of how I had been occupying my time. Why was I doing this? I think because time flew by in some ways and much like my current life, it also dragged as if lugging a dead body uphill. So there I was, sitting with my coffee in hand trying to account for my time, trying to figure out how I got here, the place where I am trying to figure out what work would best suit me at 50. Someone recently told me it was not a good idea to mention my age so much. Befuddled, I asked why. Her answer included all the stereotypes about what it means to be 50. Fifty, she determined meant old, unemployable, over the hill, and falling apart. As I adjusted my very smudged reading glasses, and wiggled in my seat, so my legs didn&#39;t cramp up and my back didn&#39;t hurt, I felt indignant at first, but then I knew she had a point about the age thing. She had referred to me as middle aged, but I know even with a longer life expectancy, I am now on the back thirty. Even at forty, I had a work expectancy of at least twenty more years, but now when I tell people I am fifty, I get the idea from the expression on their faces that I have a better chance of convincing people that I escaped from a home than I do of getting a decent job. It&#39;s too bad, since I have all this experience with people. I have gotten really good at being patient, and listening to people. In my work prime of my thirties, I was always in a hurry, trying to pull information out of them as if I were extracting an abscessed tooth. I just wanted to get on with it, so I could bustle on over to the next task.
I retired from nursing because I was becoming burned out on medicine, or actually the process of medicine. Diagnosis, prognosis, therapy plans were still fascinating to me, but I worked in geriatrics where getting an order for a routine blood culture had turned into an act of God. My patients needed to be on their death beds for me to get anything done. Either that or have a really good lawyer who was chomping at the bit to go to court. I had been a nurse for nearly twenty five years and the constant banging of my head left me feeling exhausted and weary, which in turn left me being less than a good nurse. So far every time someone finds out I retired from nursing I get sort of shamed about it. I mean, if I had kept my license up, surely I would have a job. I suppose that is true, but I never wanted to be that person who stayed too long. My analogy is the girl in the corner at a party with a little vomit in her hair. I didn’t want to be that girl. I knew if I didn’t let it go, I would have ended up in the corner.
O.K., so back to accounting for the last decade, so there I was racking my brain for how I have spent my time in the last ten years, and the results astounded me.  This isn’t a revelation of how I wasted my youth. That can come another day, but what I realized as I tallied up days, and years is I spent eight, count them eight years in high school. Now before anyone thinks I was a slow learner, those eight years were with my children. I had four children in four years, and yes, I was aware of what caused it. My kids have always been my first priority. I made it clear to Michael long before I got remarried, that they came first. The good news is he got four kids in the deal; the bad news is he ended up with four teenagers for eight long years. 
I hadn’t realized how many years were taken up with Homecomings, proms, dances, driving lessons, detentions, band concerts, cross country meets, youth groups, college visits, broken relationships, friend drama, drug and alcohol lectures and general high school mayhem.  Eight years of not sleeping, dropping off, picking up, shopping for, cleaning up after and letting go. Actually, with four years apiece it equals twelve years, but there was some overlap so I have whittled it down to eight. 
Mike and I had agreed a long time ago I would be doing the heavy lifting when it came to the kids. At first it was out of respect for my experience as their mom, but in the end, it had more to do with my ability to multi task twelve items at a time. 
So when making my account of all my high school years, I was thinking about all the self shaming I do about not making a living right now. Maybe I can think of this as my gap year, the year after high school before college starts. Truthfully, I haven’t had a kid in high school since 2010, but I haven’t taken a break since then either, so this might be the exact time and the right place to do just that. Since the kids graduated from high school, I haven’t really taken a breath. Until last year they were all home. Now, with only one working adult left in the house, maybe I can sit back and take a breath and let some things sink in.
Once I realized how many years I have given for the cause, I count high school as a triple score since aneurysms are a side effect, I could not help but think of this time as my graduation gift. 
Tomorrow is Mike’s Friday, even though the calendar says it is Monday. I was supposed to send out more resumes to anyone with an address, internet or otherwise. But I think what I might do instead is put myself down to be a volunteer somewhere. Maybe, instead of spending my mornings wincing at the latest list of rejection letters, I will send out my information for an organization that would be glad to have me. I mean, it’s my gap year, and in a gap year philanthropy is usually what comes to mind before one goes off and starts their “real” life. 
Now that I have graduated and the world is my fifty year old oyster, I can prepare for the road ahead, like any good student of the world.

&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjCFm1WKof-1ygpatScqxpcERFSBYQJH2Hz2SG6FBXUfiE_B3iTaDD_OTl1zWKfN_tzB-N5mb7vBFMX6dYJKGxJhdUFDjU5sF-p4QjbPxAdh0eTHByQKTMV53N60rVuAwHCZ8Ot7sxQusI/s1600/the+road+ahead.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; &gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjCFm1WKof-1ygpatScqxpcERFSBYQJH2Hz2SG6FBXUfiE_B3iTaDD_OTl1zWKfN_tzB-N5mb7vBFMX6dYJKGxJhdUFDjU5sF-p4QjbPxAdh0eTHByQKTMV53N60rVuAwHCZ8Ot7sxQusI/s320/the+road+ahead.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/09/gap-year.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjCFm1WKof-1ygpatScqxpcERFSBYQJH2Hz2SG6FBXUfiE_B3iTaDD_OTl1zWKfN_tzB-N5mb7vBFMX6dYJKGxJhdUFDjU5sF-p4QjbPxAdh0eTHByQKTMV53N60rVuAwHCZ8Ot7sxQusI/s72-c/the+road+ahead.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-2999235386008822554</guid><pubDate>Fri, 27 Sep 2013 13:38:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-09-27T08:38:19.175-05:00</atom:updated><title>No Time To Stand Still</title><description>Since moving to Chicago I have learned many new things, which I find amusing and somewhat disconcerting. I learned which neighborhoods I will never visit, due to the amount of violence in the city. I learned what &quot;Wildings&quot; are, an activity where groups of people accost an individual, and I learned that having the lake on the east is perplexing to me.
Being from Cleveland, Ohio, it so ingrained in me that the lake is north, it has cost me a great deal of time getting lost in Houston and now Chicago. Houston had the coast on the south side, and Chicago has Lake Michigan to the east. 
It seems Lake Erie will always take the north position on my personal compass.
I remain unemployed, but not without activity. I have sculpted an original piece of artwork, and one that I love. I have written a play, being judged, and I sold a painting. I am starting a small, very small, tiny, little business to be announced later, and I am still looking for a &quot;day job&quot;.
While I am technically unemployed, I am not idle, except on the days I am overwhelmed by the move, which happens. The Midwest seems for the most part the same, but there are nuances to any city and I am having to learn what living in Chicagoland is for myself. I love the convenience of things, the mass transportation, the people. I really like the people. Michael said it and I think it is true, they just seem to get me. Folks in Houston are nice, but getting me is not something that happened often. Maybe it was because they were southern and I was northern. Maybe it was because I laughed too loud, and they were more demure. Or maybe I translate better in the Midwest. I tend to think that is the case, that the Midwesterner just get my humor, and understands my references. Texas had a Cleveland, so any time I said I was from Cleveland they assumed it was the small town 30 minutes north of Houston. When I say Cleveland here, everybody instantly knows where that is, and they don&#39;t make Cleveland jokes, which I remain grateful.
I am having to navigate new digs once again. We do not own a home yet, but are waiting for one we are interested in. In the mean time, some days are meaner than others, we are renting a small townhouse. Most of our belongings remain in the &quot;Big House&quot; stored away, which is difficult because whenever I look for something I can guarantee it is in there, imprisoned until we move again. Once we do purchase a property, we will have moved 5 times in 3 years. let that little nugget of information sink in for a moment. I actively wince when I think about it, so naturally, I try not to.
I miss my old house, my friends, but I really don&#39;t miss Houston that much. It isn&#39;t that Houston isn&#39;t lovely, but I am better off here, in the north where seasons change and winds blow.
I have gone and participated in the plethora of festivals all over this area. I have picked apples, seen art shows, gotten to know folks at several medical facilities due an abnormal mammogram, which I am happy to say is benign, but still a surgical thing. I know my neighbors, at least by face if not by name, and I am now figuring out which channels are the local ones on the cable box. Like most things I have experienced, in six months, I will be living here without even thinking about having moved 1100 miles to do it. For now we are still the family who moved all the way from Texas. It&#39;s cute how some neighbors still call us Texans because they can&#39;t remember our names. 
I have moments of severe discomfort from the move when I look at my beloved as if I am asking, &quot;Was it worth it?&quot; and he smiles back at me with the, &quot;It&#39;s too soon to tell&quot; smile across his lips. We like it here, we do, but moving whether it is across town, or across country is never easy. I do know where to shop for groceries, and how to get around to find things and I now have a handy dandy iphone that helps me navigate when my directions are bad. I could have really used that when we moved down south and I couldn&#39;t find anything.
The weather is becoming cooler, the wind now has a slight nip to it, which causes me to wrap up in snuggly clothes. I had given most of my winter wear away after living in the south for so long, so I imagine I will have to at some point, go shopping for more weather appropriate clothes.
As a writer, I like to take steps back and look at this from the outside when I can. As a human, I almost have to do that every once in a while to gain perspective, for fear of being swallowed up by the negatives. My default is to want to believe that all things happen for a reason, even during the times when I am getting my ass kicked. Or should I say, especially when I am getting my ass kicked.
I am happy we moved, even though it is hard at times, even though the rough parts have been a little rougher than I had hoped. As much as I liked Texas, and love my southern friends, I am a Midwesterner at heart and I feel very much like I am home after a very long absence. The folks from here say all the time that I will change my tune once winter hits. I suppose there is something to that. No one has a better spring than Texas. If you decide to see Texas, go in the spring, it is magnificent. I will miss my mild winters, and tropical sweet smelling blossoms, but for now I have the smell of fall, where I lean in and inhale as deeply as I can taking it all in. The leaves are about to change and the evenings are chilly. 
The other day I was referred to as an activist, a much better title than an unemployable. My summer had been filled to the brim with letters to Congressional members, watching live stream political events and adding my voice whenever I thought I could help. I had all that time, so I figured why not? Or better yet, I have no excuse to not get involved.  I wasn&#39;t too busy, I wasn&#39;t really busy at all, so I came into a fold of people who are trying to accomplish reform. 
I should have titled this blog Moving Day, because when I look at my posts so many are about moving from one place to another, changing jobs, careers, residences. At 50 I had pictured myself firmly entrenched in a house I had owned for years, doing a job for almost as long and having holiday dinners at my house for the extended family. It&#39;s a nice Norman Rockwell kind of picture, isn&#39;t it?  It isn&#39;t even close to my reality, but it&#39;s a nice picture.
Once I stop dreaming about what kind of life that would have been, I always ask myself the same question. Would I even remotely be the same person if I had taken that path instead? We all know that answer for ourselves. I would have had different problems, different quandaries, different ideals, and maybe even different opinions. What moving has given me is the ability to be afraid and do stuff anyway. It gave me new eyes when meeting people for the first time.  Moving forced me to open up, feel exposed, vulnerable, and without ego. Moving allowed me to let go of my past, and reinvent myself according to who I wanted to be rather than people from my past dictating who they thought I was. 
A couple of days ago, Mike and I went house hunting, a plan B for us. The subject inevitably comes up about how long we are planning to live here. If we buy house 1, will we get our money out of it if we choose to move before 10 years, and what of the housing market and can we remodel and recoup if an opportunity comes up earlier. In our heads we are already moving again. Maybe it is a force of habit, maybe it is the wanderer that seems to rear up every few years, or maybe it is merely an old habit that we may have to leave behind.
Since I have so much time on my hands, I am trying to fill my days doing all the things I wanted to do and swore I didn&#39;t have the time. I am an artist, musician, writer, dog walker, activist, gourmet cook, hiker, biker, and perpetual dork. It is a luxury to have the time, even without the money to bolster my options. I told Mike the other day, my biggest fear is finding a job and getting settled and not having any time. 
Tonight is date night. It was chosen at random just because I have the time to plan it. There will be simple inexpensive pleasures of a home cooked meal, a bottle of wine and a winding walk around nature. There will be hand holding, long kisses and a deep appreciation in having someone to share this experience with, who still makes me laugh. We are, without a doubt, moving on and into our future here.&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghYUREpAjxhKda8bsY-kzqyqWGGft0DkbweXxITqokYEEimNfAq_C9uOjhycjgQ26AvkLxFpKjm78uyMOSymZs8WnsumK2H2mLJKQxL0D34gidOvaoVpVxWisbF3MDEz4Oc9mXGn-LuBs/s1600/094.JPG&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghYUREpAjxhKda8bsY-kzqyqWGGft0DkbweXxITqokYEEimNfAq_C9uOjhycjgQ26AvkLxFpKjm78uyMOSymZs8WnsumK2H2mLJKQxL0D34gidOvaoVpVxWisbF3MDEz4Oc9mXGn-LuBs/s320/094.JPG&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/09/no-time-to-stand-still.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghYUREpAjxhKda8bsY-kzqyqWGGft0DkbweXxITqokYEEimNfAq_C9uOjhycjgQ26AvkLxFpKjm78uyMOSymZs8WnsumK2H2mLJKQxL0D34gidOvaoVpVxWisbF3MDEz4Oc9mXGn-LuBs/s72-c/094.JPG" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-1582868011126130590</guid><pubDate>Sun, 08 Sep 2013 13:07:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-09-08T08:07:28.849-05:00</atom:updated><title>Not Everybody Looks Good In Hats</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEL232xmOvqNl2_YHhIiQkND1TiY_exWNBYE9DQFpNbofq7kwt4PRJ7_bdjbOFkqCVwcG0AYuTnS6QL3dsZmnmg5Px-yKAq-HudhEm_T2mAT6DHSUrmgi_eTMAGEHwHdjcAFQNv8MqlI4/s1600/Kellie+in+a+hat.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear: left; float: left; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-right: 1em;&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEL232xmOvqNl2_YHhIiQkND1TiY_exWNBYE9DQFpNbofq7kwt4PRJ7_bdjbOFkqCVwcG0AYuTnS6QL3dsZmnmg5Px-yKAq-HudhEm_T2mAT6DHSUrmgi_eTMAGEHwHdjcAFQNv8MqlI4/s400/Kellie+in+a+hat.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;Not everybody looks good in hats. I happen to be a person who can pull it off. Every time I have worn a hat, I get complimented on the hat, as if the hat is the one carrying off the stylish statement. But I know for a fact, and have personally witnessed those people who should never try and wear a hat.  It&#39;s tricky, this hat thing. It happens to be one of my more rare talents, the ability to wear a hat. There is a secret to it, an uncommon phenomena to being able to wear hats and not look like a complete dork. The secret is...I have a tiny head. I almost require the hat to balance off the rest of me. My peanut head has been an issue all of my adult life.  In my youth the size of my head held no reference, but as an adult, with my widening hips and strong thighs, my head size became a fashion issue. 
I have had people tell me that they personally don&#39;t care for hats. I look at their melon heads, sizable domes fixed atop their neck and think to myself, &quot;Yeah, I see where that comes from.&quot;  Since I have had to shop in the children&#39;s section at different times for my glasses, ski goggles and headbands, I have the unique ability to put a hat on my head and see how it begins to balance off the rest of my body.  My hats, many fedoras, which I find fascinating how many people detest this particular hat, are my great equalizer for my peanut head. 
I never considered before how many women would notice my hats. It seems to either delight or confound them. They either show appreciation or condemnation with very little in between. Mostly I get that little compliment and wistful sigh, which we both acknowledge is their way saying they cannot pull off a look in hats. It&#39;s sad, really, that so many large heads just can&#39;t fit inside a hat comfortably. 
Hats are my thing, like my boho clothes, or my paint splattered t-shirts, or my poker straight hair with wisps of silver that tend to stick straight up. I won&#39;t lie, admittedly, my hats cover a multitude of sins, like the gray hair that looks as if it is trying to escape my skull.
I recently read an article degrading the use of hats in fashion. I noted nothing had been written about the giant sunglasses, which I cannot wear because they cover over half my face and make look as though I were trying to store my face in Tupperware. Hats seemed to be, from the authors perspective over used, cliche, and quite unbecoming. For a moment I pondered her exasperation over the use of hats. I did until I noticed her picture at the end of the article. She had a rather large head compared to her dainty neck and tiny form. I suppose for her, hats had become her fashion enemy, pointing out the striking difference between head and body. 
Nope, not everybody can wear hats. The poor dear would never know the joy of sporting a deliciously comfortable, incredibly warm, yet slightly fashionable head wear. I felt so lucky today, with fall coming, and winter right behind, my first in a decade, I will pull out all of my lovely hats and wear one nearly every day. My petite, peanut head will feel warm, and balanced.  Heads up, little noggins, hat season is almost here.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/09/not-everybody-looks-good-in-hats.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgEL232xmOvqNl2_YHhIiQkND1TiY_exWNBYE9DQFpNbofq7kwt4PRJ7_bdjbOFkqCVwcG0AYuTnS6QL3dsZmnmg5Px-yKAq-HudhEm_T2mAT6DHSUrmgi_eTMAGEHwHdjcAFQNv8MqlI4/s72-c/Kellie+in+a+hat.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-6453732763184804436</guid><pubDate>Thu, 29 Aug 2013 15:03:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-08-29T10:03:00.659-05:00</atom:updated><title>It&#39;s All Too Much</title><description>I have been following social media and the news. It’s enough to make me want to crawl into bed and not come out.  I call it “Punxsutawney-ing”.  As an individual, a peaceful individual at that, it’s hard to make heads or tails of what I am supposed to do with all this information. Should I join in the voices who attacked a twenty year old woman for twerking, or go after the grown man for allowing it during his deeply misogynistic song,  which on a side note makes me unhappy, because if it had different words I would like the song.  It is reminiscent of songs from the 1970’s with the catchy beats.  
Syria gases its own people, so we as country feel obligated to do what?  What exactly can we do without going into a situation and making it exponentially worse?  My fear is what it always is, and if we go in there guns blazing, how will that save the innocent people now?  How will dropping bombs, however targeted save lives?  Is this another “greater good” situation that ends up being a quagmire?  It looks vaguely familiar, so my fear level is way past red.  Remember when we were color coded on fear?  
There is a man in Montana who was sentenced to thirty days for having sex with a fourteen year old girl, because “she was older than her chronological age”.  She committed suicide.  I could not help but feel like 1950 would rear itself from the past and ask for its outdated thinking back.  North Carolina has their voting rights pulled so far back, that they are reminiscent of pre-civil rights era.  Rowe vs. Wade has been over turned in several states going against women’s Constitutional rights, and even though we have had over 7,500 gun related deaths and it is still climbing we cannot have civil discourse about what to do about gun safety without zealots threatening to shoot us all.  And let me not forget the murderous, torturous state Russia is in against gay people, a country, mind you, where we are going to celebrate the Olympics.
I am sure you can see why I have a headache.  It’s not too hard to understand why we mortals want to run and hide.  Phil has no idea how lucky he is.  As an adult, a fifty year old woman I am continually shocked at what is happening and how little it seems we have learned.  About once a day, I can’t help but find myself thinking, “We are still here?  How is this possible?”  But alas, it is not only possible it is pervasive.  My daughter, an adult as well, came to me disheartened about some things that are going on.  What words could I use to soothe her?  What could I possibly say that would have any impact on how she was feeling?  The truth for me is I believe we are on the precipice of something that is either going to propel us forward or cause to fall amongst the craggy rocks.  Either way, something seems to be afoot.  Now while the knee jerk reaction I might have is to hide, to “Punxsutawney” myself away until it is all over, the peaceful driven side wants to help support those who seek real and lasting change.  It’s an incredibly frightening world right now.  The instability in the Middle East, the growing noise of hate and intolerance, it’s all a bit much.  I have my own bag of hammers right now too, which is adding to my code red status.  I have health issues, job issues, personal relationship issues, I have issues.  So what is an experienced girl to do?  As a singular individual it may seem that my options to add to the world are limited, but in truth, the simple decisions I make today may be something that starts the dominos falling in my favor.  Here’s what I mean.  Every time I encounter another human being I look in their face, I mean I really look into the eyes to see if they have something brewing far beneath their working exterior.  It’s something I learned during my tenure as a nurse.  Reading people is not as difficult as one would think.  Understand this, when you see anger, what you are really witnessing is hurt.  That person has been hurt in some way or another.  Most outside emotions can be followed like a winding path back to some kind of hurt.  There are many wounded people out there who are hanging by a thread.  I have been where they are, where I have felt like a good stiff breeze would blow me away.  Once you take the 15 seconds to see their eyes, to take them in, show them kindness and here is the key, expect nothing.  This isn’t about you directly, so keep your expectations out of it.   Be kind to every single person you encounter regardless of how they act towards you.  I promise you, your success rate in seeing change will astound you.  Not every heart will change.  Not every person you are kind to will respond to you at all, but if you get one person who smiles back, or their face softens, or their shoulders drop, you are a success.  Every person alive has stuff they dealing with, so in that vein, if we all acknowledge each other, see each other, remember to be kind, courteous, polite, respectful imagine how in a week things could change.  Imagine how your mail lady now smiles glad to see you, or the maintenance guy is eager to help because he knows how grateful you are, or the cashier waves to you when she sees you enter the store.  How can I be so sure that is how it will turn out?   I have witnessed it.  It’s the joy in being a woman of a certain age, is the experience in seeing the good in people.  As a financial aid advisor I saw students who wanted to slit my throat on arrival, come back days later and apologize to me for being mean.  These are the very young people you hear are cruel and thoughtless and self centered.  I do not believe all that crap about the youth of today being worthless and lazy. That’s what they said about my generation too, so yeah, it’s crap.  These young people who are in college, completely freaked out just want someone to look them in the face.  That is all anyone wants is to be acknowledged, viewed as human, viewed as valuable.   Since moving north I realized just how much I miss their faces, their special kind of crazy, their want to be cool, accepted, and adult.  I miss them running down the hall at me full speed about knocking me down showing me their passing test grades, as they tell the astonished story of how they conquered a great fear.  I miss the way they kept me young, and reminded me that the youth of today will be the very ones who can save us all.  I miss the living, breathing hope.
While I have nothing to add about the VMAs, since it has already been said a thousand different ways, and I hope my country does right by the world and also holds the UN accountable since we are not the world police, I have plenty to say about human rights.  So basic a right as to be treated with dignity, with fairness, with accountability, and respect, so basic, it literally takes seconds out of your day.   It really is all bit a much.  But for me, there is hope, there are people every day standing up for what they know to be true not just for themselves but for all humanity, taking it one small act at a time.  When faced with this big of a plate full, we may need to reduce it down to manageable bites.  Go out today with no expectation other than to work on you and how you act and react.  If you run into me today, just know I am going to be nice to you, for no other reason than I am just glad to have you here, with me, helping out.  This place just wouldn’t be the same without you.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/08/its-all-too-much.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-744025426831339765</guid><pubDate>Mon, 24 Jun 2013 18:11:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-06-24T13:11:02.866-05:00</atom:updated><title>Home Sweet Town Houzistan</title><description>I am having a difficulty finding somewhere to write in my new digs.  Certainly, it stands to reason that since I am as shiny as a new penny here, it will take me a while to find my spot. But there are other issues getting in the way, as well.  Since our moving team decided what we needed at our temporary housing instead of sticking to my list, there have been unforeseen challenges to me working at home.  For instance, a writer needs good lighting.  I had listed the necessary lamps t be delivered to our temporary digs, but the movers decided to give me only one lamp, but supplemented me with a fondue pot and several Bundt pans. Don’t get me wrong, I am not about to take the gifting of the fondue pot for granted, but a little lighting beyond what could be mistaken for prison cell chic, would be nice. 
The next thing a writer needs is flat surfaces to write on, say like a desk, or a bench, or table for instance.  I will admit to you we do have a few of these of things, but since we were gifted with several dozen boxes that were supposed to go to storage, which will now and forever more be referred to as The Big House, they are covered in layers and layers of stuff.  Stuff, I might add, that was supposed to be trekked to The Big House.  I am currently writing on a several stacked pillows, while leaning over all the electronics and cords.  My comfort’s current consideration is the least of this.
I am a bit of a control freak about the environment I write in.  I have spoken to many writers and they face the same quandaries I do about the space where they write.  For me I need peace, quiet, and clean.  I have none of these here in Town Houzistan.  My uber-cluttered environment has me feeling clogged and my back can only take so much before I steal away part of my makeshift desk to lie down on the floor, the only un-cluttered surface we have.  
There are also weird happenings here in Town Houzistan.  Last week we had the emergency squad and police here to rescue either a boy or a man, I couldn’t tell, from the communal pool. It turned out to be an unfortunate near drowning incident.  The weird part of that is no one seemed to know where he lived or who he was related to.  Next we had neighbors who threw one helluva party on a Thursday night with so many people; they spilled onto the patio and the parking lot that was twenty yards away.  Last night the fire department showed up to extinguish a grease fire in someone’s oven.  The day before a police SUV sat in our parking lot for over an hour, and that is only what I saw.  When I asked a neighbor if this place was always so busy, he responded, “No, this is unusual for here. It all just started a few weeks ago.” He asked how long I had lived here and I responded with a vague shrug, not wanting him to know we moved in a few weeks ago.
I find myself not sure what to do.  I want to be busy writing, creating, and furthering my process, but I feel weird and watch the internet and TV instead.  In truth I really don’t feel guilty about my bad behavior, just odd.  It takes time to figure who you are when you move to a new town.  Just finding the Post Office can set me back a few hours.  Having the internet to rely on has been a God send. Remind me to send Al Gore a big “Thank You” note.  If not for the internet, settling into my new town would take infinitely longer, trust me; I’ve done the leg work on this one.
I thought about writing in a café or a book store, Barnes and Noble has free WiFi, but yelling at the patrons to “Pipe down!” because I can’t concentrate and can’t afford to lose my train of thought might be problematic.  I currently have a small space outside with a bistro table and chairs, covered in fresh rain drops.  It’s under a large oak tree, in a quiet corner, isolated from the growing amount of police traffic.  It’s a perfect place to write if it weren’t raining, or swarmed in mosquitoes.  
I have excuses for not writing and they are damn good ones.  While I am not usually fluent in procrastination, this time, I am allowing it.  Nay, I am practicing it.  I know soon enough I will bore of my boredom and get back to work.  In a short time I will be chomping at the bit to finish what I started, hushing those who dare speak to me whilst I am writing.  That time is coming. But today, and tomorrow, probably, and maybe the next day, I am a bum.  As my dialogue sits idly waiting for my return, my twitter account and facebook and other media escapes have been tended to as diligently as if they were a garden of rare roses.  I have to go now.  “When Harry Met Sally” is on and I have four new followers and pm on facebook, and I still haven’t checked my LinkedIn. 
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/06/home-sweet-town-houzistan.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-3870874576446882971</guid><pubDate>Sun, 23 Jun 2013 12:15:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-06-23T07:15:45.855-05:00</atom:updated><title>Dirty Little Assumptions</title><description>Stereotypes are set up as an easy way to judge someone without taking the time to actually know them. For example, there was a woman in second hand, dirty clothes, shopping in a discount store with 4 little kids running around her cart. The small boys were dirty, the little girls were wearing mismatched outfits and the cart was filled with snack crackers and juice boxes. An older woman disgusted by the sight and sound of them walked up and said, &quot;Why on God&#39;s green earth would you have all these kids if you could not afford to feed them properly? You should be ashamed of yourself!&quot;
The woman was me, their father was deceased, the boys just got done with soccer practice, the girls dressed themselves, I was in my cleaning clothes, and the snacks were because it was my turn to buy for the team that week. 
She judged us by what she thought we were, not by any actual information. She was wrong. 
Be careful what you assume. It is almost always contrary to the facts.
Another example of assuming and making judgments is years ago when my children were small they attended a private catholic school. It was parent night and there was a woman dressed to the nines in a black lace dress, with opaque black stockings and stiletto heels. She wore a long black fur coat and her hair was swept up and her makeup was done.  She was single, and aloof. None of the other mothers would talk to her; she stood quietly to the side, never making eye contact. I overheard a mom call her a name. I don’t want to repeat the name, but let’s just say it referred to her being a prostitute. I noticed how the other women circled around their husbands and turned their backs purposely to the woman in black.  Another woman behind me whispered to her husband how inappropriately dressed the woman in black was.  While nothing was said directly to the woman, the message was loud and clear. This woman, who had clearly over dressed for the occasion was not welcome. There was an air that this woman had either purposefully or inadvertently offended the other moms. I asked a teacher I knew well if she could feel it. She answered that she could, but she felt the others were embarrassing themselves. While no one had asked the woman in black about herself, they only assumed things about her. 
Here again, the woman in black was me. I had a dinner date with a very handsome, successful man that evening at a nice restaurant downtown. It had been the first date I had in months, but it landed on a parent night. I had considered not going to the school because I knew I didn’t have time to change clothes, and the idea of showing up in heels was terrifying to me, because I had already faced that particular character assassination squad. My children asked me to go because they had art work to show, teachers to meet, things of pride to be displayed. So much to my chagrin, I dressed for my big date, and went first to the school. I had called my date to tell him I had to participate in this school obligation, and he offered to go with me. He had sons of his own, and understood why I had to show up for my kids. I declined because we hadn’t been dating too long and I didn’t want anyone assuming anything about the relationship. My dress was black lace, but it was not low cut, the hem was knee length and the sleeves were long. My now infamous dress was elegant. Ask my parents about it; I wore it one year to a New Year’s party with them. I was dressed like a grown woman going to a nice restaurant, but what if my hem was high, or my cleavage did show? Would it have seemed more appropriate for people to judge me? I got shamed for being the parental harlot, when in fact, all I was doing was going on a date as the Widow Foley.  That’s the thing about facts, they tell the story for you, so there is very little to judge.

OK, one more and this time I will tell you outright the woman was me. In 1992 I suffered a full arrest, leaving me with what the medical community referred to as a “cognitive deficit”. Here is what I mean: I could not read, write, drive or remember what my address was. I had trouble following conversations, and doing some pretty basic tasks. I remained with my “cognitive deficit” for awhile, months, actually. I had to re-learn things I had originally learned in Kindergarten. I was in such dire straits at times; I did not even know to be embarrassed by my condition. What I did know was that I had to explain my condition frequently to people so they would slow things down for me, so that I could fully understand. Well, that was until a nurse who had been administering immunizations to my children said this, “Oh dear God! How awful for your husband! He didn’t get his wife back? This must have devastated him!” I stood staring at this nurse as if she had just slapped me, my face growing a deep and painful red. Her first response was to tell me how bad my husband had it, seriously? My children, very young and impressionable at the time, listened to her say that to me and took it all in. Once we were in the car all their questions came flying at me like a spider monkey. “Yes, I am not the same anymore. I don’t know if I will ever be who I was. No, that wasn’t very nice of her to say. Yes, daddy is unhappy this happened. No, he did not say he doesn’t love me anymore. Yes, it’s true I don’t know what I used to. No, it doesn’t mean I am ‘retarded’”.  My kids are smart. They saw and heard the judgment come flying out of the nurses’ mouth, and wanted to know what it all meant. While I could not justify to them why this person had decided to exclaim her opinion, what it did do was open a dialogue with my kids about what had happened at the hospital while I was there. In language they could understand I explained to them how my heart stopped beating, my lungs stopped breathing, and my body stopped working for minutes until the doctor could bring me back to life. “So you were dead?” the older kids asked. “Yes, in a way, I was gone for a few minutes, but they were able to bring me back, so I could be here for you.” In the back seat I heard a collective, “Wow.” Suddenly I was a cool mom, who had been like Lazarus and risen from the dead. My children were the real ones who had to deal with my cognitive deficit. They were the ones who had to remind me of things, be patient as I learned how to read again, write again, and find my way home. It was my children who witnessed my frustration at having to become someone new, different from who I once was. I’m incredibly grateful it was them, the little non-judgmental ones who loved me so very much, it did not matter who I was, just that I was.
I am not one of these people, but all of them. I am not a worm who can be cut into pieces, living separate from the other parts. All of these scenarios belong to me as one person. Like every person I have ever met, I am complex, diverse, and ever expanding. To assume that I am merely one of these characters is to assume there is no depth to me, no possibility in me.  All these stories taught me and my children, that people are not always what they appear to be. These instances taught us to be kinder, more compassionate to others, and always remember that we want the same courtesy extended to us. Go ahead and judge my kids out of hand, I dare you. My son the skate boarder will knock your socks off with his poetry. My oldest whose intellect is so fierce it’s scary, will melt your heart when holding a baby. My oldest boy who appears to be techno crazed and surly will make you fall down laughing at his silliness. My youngest child, a tiny waif, will tackle you to the ground and pummel you if you deserve it. They are not what one might assume. They are multi-faceted gems. 
There are times in life when we must make judgment calls. But there are more times than not when judgment should be reserved for when all the facts are in. I concede, not everyone is nice. It is not safe to trust everyone you meet. What I am hoping for is that we are able to stop ourselves from making snap judgments about situations and people where all the facts are not in. Just filling in the blanks to suit our own agendas is not good enough anymore. We should be evolved enough to give a situation the proper amount of time in order to garner all the facts. Assuming and making judgments about individuals is a dangerous thing. If you can do to it others, then just remember, it can then be done to you, and I would certainly hate to hear that.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/06/dirty-little-assumptions.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-294074711134213924</guid><pubDate>Mon, 29 Apr 2013 12:11:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-04-29T07:11:49.918-05:00</atom:updated><title>Confessions of a Terrible Wife</title><description>I haven&#39;t written here because I got hacked. I felt so invaded, so vulnerable, so I stopped. Part of me got really angry, and part of me felt so hurt. Why hack this blog? Nothing I say is of any real importance except that I relate to people on an emotional level. Anywho, I decided that I can&#39;t not write because some a-hole hacked my account. I did what was necessary in order to secure my account again and here I am.
I am confessing to being a terrible wife. I am not saying this in order to gain sympathy. I don&#39;t want any. I am saying this because I really don&#39;t think I am the only one who thinks they are terrible wife. Don&#39;t get me wrong, I think there are things I am good at, such as, I am a good friend, a tender lover, a brilliant interior designer, a stellar dog walker, but this wife thing, yeah, I am really terrible at it. 
I am not sure of what it means to be a good wife. I don&#39;t believe in that whole &quot;stand by your man&quot; thing. I resent when my decisions are whittled down because I am obligated to someone else and their work, or life choices. I am fiercely independent, incredibly stubborn and often selfish. As a female who grew up in a confusing time of having to work and maintain a 1950&#39;s home with perfectly appointed furnishings and a freshly scrubbed floor, I am the worst. My belief is if you want to have a perfectly clean house I will point you to the vacuum. If you want a delicious meal, I will show you where to shop, hand the coupons and the directions to the range. I love to cook, so most of the time I do it, but when I don&#39;t feel like it, I don&#39;t. 
Mike and I have been having some very real discussions about what my life is going to look like since I am having to move across country again. I had to relinquish my position as a financial aid advisor at our community college in order to be in the same state as my husband. It&#39;s not a decision I am happy with. I should not have had to choose between being married and being employed, but there it is, and I was bitter as I made the choice to be with my manfriend.
It&#39;s not my job that moved. It isn&#39;t my choice to move to the city where my manfriend now works. None of what we have been going through has anything to do with me, except it does. Thoroughly pissed off by my lack of choices, my lack of support as a spouse rather than an employee in this, I started to really stew. &quot;What about me?&quot; I mumbled around the house. Yeah, what about me? In my head a good wife would take all this in stride because Mike is the primary provider. But he is not the sole provider, no married man ever is, regardless of what his wife does for a living. I felt invisible.
At nearly fifty years old, I began to notice in this relocation how very little I was being considered on any level.
Recently, I applied for jobs doing what I did down here. I have no degree, never finishing college, but opting for family life instead, so I am now considered unqualified for a job I already had been doing. I would like to say I handled well, but in truth, I got angry all over again. I thought about what a good wife would do. Would a good wife be waitress at 50 in order to help her family or would she opt for the housewife title, staying home, cleaning, cooking shopping, doing the Rosary every Tuesday morning with the elder women of the church. How would we financially survive if that is my chosen option? If I don&#39;t work, will we make it in the big city?
Besides, I am not a motivated housewife. I don&#39;t care if we have dust bunnies. I would rather try and make them pets than lug the vacuum up a flight of stairs to suck them up. I look terrible in house dresses, almost never go to the salon, and hate grocery shopping with a passion. While there are aspects to being a good wife I like, there are more that I tend to push against. Tell me I am obligated to do something and every fiber in my being begins to rebel. I was sitting outside, taking a &quot;union break&quot; sipping some extra strength coffee, when I looked down at my wedding ring. I like being married to Mike, I do. On the inside of the ring it is inscribed, &quot;for my Kel&quot;. Yes, I am my beloved&#39;s and beloved is mine,blah, blah blah. But I am starting to think I need another wedding ring, one I give to myself. I need something that says while I like being married, it is not the definition of me. While I choose to be with Mike, I don&#39;t need to choose all his life and he doesn&#39;t need to choose all of mine. 
I will be the first one to tell you that living on my own, without my Michael, has been pretty awful, so this isn&#39;t about being single again. Been there, done that, bought the t-shirt and worn it out. What I am talking about is how to make a cross country move that is meaningful for me. While the bottom line is we are doing it for Mike&#39;s job, I need to find a way to own my decision to join him. I fear, otherwise, I may get restless or bored, or resentful that I HAD to move for HIM. A good wife moves for their husband and makes it work for them. In my head, that&#39;s how I see it. They pack up their life, hop on a plane and then proceed to unpack, making life comfortable for their spouse. But I am not a good wife. I am thoughtless about Mike&#39;s comfort, assuming if he wants his pillows fluffed, he will fluff them. Michael, my Michael, knows I am a terrible wife. He knew it long before we got married. My first marriage crashed and burned partially due to me being a terrible wife. Danny needed a traditional wife. I tried, I did, but ultimately, I failed miserably and then went about the business of swearing off marriage. I knew I was terrible at it. I didn&#39;t understand it, or even really want it. I wanted kids, a home, some creature comforts, and a partner, but not necessarily a husband. Husbands are obligations, filled with ultimatums, like the one I am faced with now. 

One of my young ones asked me, &quot;Why do you call Michael your manfriend and not your husband?&quot; 
&quot;You want me to be totally honest?&quot; The young one nodded their head. 
&quot;I am not fan of marriage, and really not fan of husbands. It&#39;s a bit of a trap and I am not wholly convinced, either is worth the hassle. It&#39;s a lot of give for women, and I am, maybe too selfish to give that much, so by making Michael my manfriend instead, I am choosing to be with him rather than out of obligation.&quot; The young one looked at me as though I had grown an additional head. &quot;But Miss Kellie, why get married then?&quot;
It dawns on me that I look a bit like a liberated hypocrite to my young one. &quot;Because it was important to us that we are bound. He asked, and when the love of your life bends down on one knee and offers up a beautiful diamond ring, showing you how very much you mean to him, you make the compromise. Love trumps ideals.&quot;
The young one nods, but I am skeptical if she really gets it, so I say this, and mean it, &quot;Look, I am a terrible wife. I am not good at most traditional things that are expected of wives. I never wanted the title, but the commitment is something different.I am not standing up raging against the institution of marriage, I am recognizing my own short comings. I am not criticizing those who get married and do it really well, I am admitting to myself and to others that being tethered to someone is difficult for me, so while I am not totally opposed, I do have to tailor it to me, and my quirkiness. Some of it comes from not wanting to owe someone anything or feel as though I am bought and paid for. I rarely ask for anything because I never want to owe anyone. Believe me when I say, this my bad.&quot;
The young one looks deep into my eyes as if trying to discover some other information.
&quot;What?&quot; I ask.
&quot;May I make an observation?&quot; the young one asks, quietly.
&quot;Yes, of course.&quot; I try and open myself to this young person who I am fairly certain is about to lay some truth on me.
&quot;This way of thinking makes you look very insecure. Is that why you don&#39;t like the wife thing? I never saw you as insecure before...&quot; the young one trails off and looks at the floor as if I am about to punish her for saying something offensive.
&quot;Bingo! Yatzee! You got it! That is exactly why, so now you can see this really is my bad. I really am a terrible wife. I may never truly get the hang of it. The only thing I can do is make sure when I am my most terrible that I apologize to Michael when it happens.&quot;
I embrace my young one, squeezing her tight, knowing we just shared a very human moment where we got to look at me as a girl rather than just a grown up.  
&quot;Miss Kellie?&quot;
&quot;Yes, darling girl,&quot; I release my hold on her.
&quot;You may be a terrible wife, but I really like who you are as a person.&quot;
I hug my young one again. &quot;Yeah, me too. I have really grown on me.&quot; Together we laugh and release all the serious that had built up between us.
I look into the face of this young woman who will one day have to discover for herself what marriage and being a wife means, and say, &quot;Define your life for yourself. Never allow anyone to tell how you think or feel. You are not only allowed to be who you are, but I want you to know we will celebrate it!&quot;
I am by most standards, a terrible wife. I am OK with that. It&#39;s the thing in me that allows me to continually question, to keep trying new things, to push through and discover my own path. This thing that is happening to us, this forced march of sorts, it&#39;s causing me to be a really terrible wife and ask myself to find out what I really want to do next. By the time we settle in our new town, my terribleness will reach an all time high. The good news for Michael is his girlfriend will be back in full force, and there is nothing hotter than that.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/04/confessions-of-terrible-wife.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-3784251095778631946</guid><pubDate>Sun, 10 Feb 2013 21:15:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-02-10T15:15:56.502-06:00</atom:updated><title>I Did Not Write the Last Post that Appeared Here</title><description></description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/02/i-did-not-write-last-post-that-appeared.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-5084393829584953857</guid><pubDate>Wed, 02 Jan 2013 14:29:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2013-01-02T08:29:09.657-06:00</atom:updated><title> All Bottled Up</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDhmgrv6kNzlJKQhuiBfWxcsE-Jpkb7MqDqrNfu_l9CefYwJ7B19QFL6fjhD8Io5EnyoXGCVv-G42yiG9pmiCWoQ3kddytvx3_KjLMKE33qCtLNn3SSIzlORmyP4Ctkx_rFnHsSWcowjE/s1600/Jar+of+joy.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;400&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDhmgrv6kNzlJKQhuiBfWxcsE-Jpkb7MqDqrNfu_l9CefYwJ7B19QFL6fjhD8Io5EnyoXGCVv-G42yiG9pmiCWoQ3kddytvx3_KjLMKE33qCtLNn3SSIzlORmyP4Ctkx_rFnHsSWcowjE/s400/Jar+of+joy.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;

I wish I had done something like this for 2012. I could have used the motivation to see the things that really matter instead of getting wrapped up in the barbed wired of things that ultimately do not. This year I know better, so I am planning to do better. I will turn 50 years old this year, I will be moving to Chicago this year, I will face unemployment and the difficulties that arise from moving across country this year. I will be having a very busy year. I am thinking about going back to school this year also. I am thinking about starting my own business this year, doing a Youtube channel this year, writing more this year, finishing my plays this year, learning to stay in my place of knowing rather than panic, this year. 
Why all this, this year? Because, why not? Why not dare to be different? Why not believe mind, body and soul things are happening for the better? Why not get rid of the cynicism, the negative speak, the self battering? Why not? 
I have done the extensive math about how things can go horribly wrong, but what about the numbers leaning to the other side? What about the odds that things will be utterly amazing, surprisingly delightful? I am now betting on those odds. 
I plan to write something joyful everyday and place it in my jar. I see things all the time that are surprising to me, or that make sit back for a minute in awe. I see things in my own backyard that are quite remarkable, so why not write them down. I have the 15 seconds that it takes to make a note and stuff it in a jar.
This is going to be a big year for no other reason than the moving part of it. But beyond our stuff taking another hike, I believe to my core this is an opportunity for me. I know what I want, so now is the time to try and make it happen. 
What if I fail? What if all my hopes and dreams fall spectacularly apart? Don&#39;t be daft, I tell myself, failure is the only way to learn from my mistakes. Success or education are my only options now.
I could play it safe and do what I know is nearly certain, or I could look at this as a chance to do something I desire, am passionate about and have wanted forever. If I try and I fail, then so be it. I failed and failed and failed, depending on your definition of failure. I am still here. I did not die from, or become incapacitated by it or even become so embarrassed that I holed up in my house never to be seen or heard form again. I got up, faced the failings of what went wrong, figured out how I could either change it or I walked away knowing it just didn&#39;t work. 
I currently have no earthly idea of where I am going to live, what I will be doing to make a living or how I will be spending the bulk of my time. Those are all unknowns and will be for a while. What I do know is I will be living with my husband again, I will be closer to home than I have been in nearly a decade, and I will meet interesting people, because that is as much a part of me as my eye color. 
I will fill my jar and drag it with me to Chicago so I can one day open my 2013 jar and read about all the magnificent things that happened this year. I will lay in Michael&#39;s arms and laugh out loud at our adventures. And I will learn from all the mistakes I will inevitably make. By this time next year I will make a new jar and begin filling it with all the wonder our future holds.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2013/01/all-bottled-up.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiDhmgrv6kNzlJKQhuiBfWxcsE-Jpkb7MqDqrNfu_l9CefYwJ7B19QFL6fjhD8Io5EnyoXGCVv-G42yiG9pmiCWoQ3kddytvx3_KjLMKE33qCtLNn3SSIzlORmyP4Ctkx_rFnHsSWcowjE/s72-c/Jar+of+joy.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-61379543454345071</guid><pubDate>Sun, 23 Dec 2012 18:31:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-12-23T12:31:47.865-06:00</atom:updated><title>Can You See Me?</title><description>I was at a super store, where nothing was particularly &quot;super&quot;, shopping for large clear containers to pack up all my holiday stuff. You see I am getting ready to move...again. I am an accidental house flipper. It was never my intention to flip houses, but here I am renovating another house I will not be living in. It is the way of it for me. I knew as soon as I put in that damn closet organizer in, I was on my way out.
Anywho, I was at the store standing in a very long line waiting for the singular cashier to check out the hundred people who were in line before me. I had gotten there really early, knowing that this close to Christmas, there would be a wait in store. My cart wasn&#39;t loaded down with Christmas goodies like it usually is, since I have only one family member with me these days. It was loaded down with large bulky plastic containers to fill with all of my holiday crap, so it can be moved back up north. How ironic that I moved 1200 miles from my hometown, so we would be spared the long distance move for my husband&#39;s company during the impending merger, only to have to pack up and move the opposite direction. We moved to Houston as a preemptive strike in 2004. We knew the merger was coming, we never expected them to move to the north. They showed us.
As I stood there, shifting my weight from one leg to the other, bored and tired, I reached down to tie my shoe. When I looked up an elderly woman cut right in front of me. Her eyes down cast avoiding my face, she showed no signs of remorse for the clear breach of store etiquette. I was faced with a choice. Either I could try and stare her down, making her feel awkward the entire time for cutting in line, or I could engage her, showing her I was a human being and not a poorly organized store display. I opted to engage her, saying hello and asking her how she was spending her holidays. I knew when I left the house I needed to be patient. I knew people were frantic and panicked over the upcoming holiday, while I just needed mundane things, since I wasn&#39;t sure how much celebrating I was actually going to do. The older, wrinkle faced woman spoke to me about her son, her grandchildren, her widowed sister. She began to blame all things possible on the president when I shifted the conversation to Christmas. She went along with me chatting, looking me in the face, smiling from time to time. It was an easy conversation. She veered off slightly getting frustrated at how slow the line was, blaming the checker. Once again, I steered the conversation to a more empathetic place talking about how hard they work, how little they get paid, and how hectic the holidays are. Again, she went with me, nodding her head, speaking about how hard it is in the world today to just earn a living. She told me she was 80 years old. &quot;My dad is 80 also,&quot; I said. We talked about having family so far away. I told her my kids moved and my husband was in Chicago.
I ended up talking to that woman for about 25 minutes. We just stood and chatted, as we slowly made our way to the front of the line. I looked in her basket, where she had only five items. She wasn&#39;t cooking for Christmas and had bought potatoes, socks for her great grandchild, and a few other things. I made sure to look in her eyes. I stayed locked on her face, making her see me. In my head I thought, &quot;I see you, I see you as a person, a woman, a mother, a grandmother and a great grandmother. I see how little you can afford, watching every penny to make sure you stay on budget. I see how tired you are, how much you have worked in your life. I see you.&quot;
She checked her few items and grabbed her singular bag. She turned to me and said warmly, smiling, &quot;Merry Christmas.&quot;  &quot;Merry Christmas, Ma&#39;am&quot;, I said as I returned the smile.
I could have gotten angry when she cut in that atrocious line. But I thought how much better it could be if I just turned an awkward silence into a momentary friendship, and I was right. I did see her, full in the face, for all the time we had together and she saw me too. I went from being a faceless nobody to someone she could relate to. It wasn&#39;t magical, or incredible or amazing. It was simply two people standing in line who had decided to make the best of it. It was human. As I left the store I made a promise to myself to be kinder this season, more patient, and give more of myself to complete strangers, even if they cut in line. I might just get a little conversation and a good story out of it.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/12/can-you-see-me.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-7036952220783569376</guid><pubDate>Thu, 20 Dec 2012 14:04:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-12-20T08:13:25.169-06:00</atom:updated><title>My 2012 Balance Sheet</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZyvglEO034wnWC0Rnr9fZ5hxJuvW-w1xTwQUWDfvRPtAao6kWgVw6V35nGYMhp_V7SbmoW7gsN3oLgCd-TpwEZZnnNo1ibl3pdfrundFgSos1YCVbfiybbeYQGzVz_l2gIjWULIUHea0/s1600/Kellie+in+Santa+hat.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;400&quot; width=&quot;300&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZyvglEO034wnWC0Rnr9fZ5hxJuvW-w1xTwQUWDfvRPtAao6kWgVw6V35nGYMhp_V7SbmoW7gsN3oLgCd-TpwEZZnnNo1ibl3pdfrundFgSos1YCVbfiybbeYQGzVz_l2gIjWULIUHea0/s400/Kellie+in+Santa+hat.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;



I was reviewing the past year as I always do in December. What had I lost? What had I gained? What had I learned? It is part of the reason I love this season so much, I suppose, my ability to take the time to reflect back on who I was and who I am becoming. My great question at the end of the season is am I becoming what I want to be or am following the wrong path? 
This year there were so many things that threw me off any path I might have chosen. I was beginning to feel as though I had no control over anything. I would be moving right along when another big life moment would toss me as though I were a rag doll. Let me explain. In the last seven months, no wait, let&#39;s go just slightly further back, in the last year, the year of 2012, my children were in a car wreck by all rights they should not have survived. I took on a full time job only to find out there was someone in my office actively wishing me ill will, Michael moved to Chicago for his job, Betty moved to San Antonio for school, my 20 year old cat got very sick and died, my sons moved back to Ohio, my very best dog got very ill at 17 and died, Michael got a much wanted and needed job offer back here in Houston and in the ninth hour it was rescinded, which left us to choose to move to Chicago so we could be together again. Whew, that is a lot even for me in my crazy life.
OK, so in the vein of thinking of what I lost, I lost having my family with me. It&#39;s my first time ever not having my children nearby. No family dinners anymore, no doors opening and closing, no kid&#39;s friends showing up at our door at all hours, all of it gone. I lost living with my husband, my best friend, my heart mate. It has been a devastating blow. I come home to cook for no one but my oldest and she and I neither feels like eating most days. I lost two of my pets who had been part of my family for decades. And for a while I lost my confidence, when I discovered someone was trying to undermine me at my employment. I found this to be so shocking, since I still have no idea to this day why anyone would want to do that. 
I did lose things this year to be sure, but the next step is to see what I had gained. I gained a strength in me I was not sure I had. I was certain when Michael packed up his car to move to Chicago without me I would crumble into dust. So far that has not happened. While it hurts, I am still here, waking up, going to work and doing what needs to be done. I have gained friends at work. These are people I can count on, people who have invited me to their homes for holidays knowing my family is all away. I gained the ability to truly be alone and be good with it. After all these years of not having so much as a minute to myself, I wondered if I had the ability to be alone without losing my mind. Turns out, I can do it and appreciate it at times, even the times when I miss my family so much I ache. I have gained the ability to see more clearly than I have in years. I know for certain who I am as a person. I know what I am capable of at this time in my life. I know when I am on the wrong path. I gained the strength needed to continue to grow my heart. The don&#39;t call it growing pains for nothing.
The final thing I reflect on what I have learned. I have learned that I can be patient, even during the days when I feel like I am crawling out of my own skin. I learned that I am stronger than I think I am. I have learned that while I can question if love conquers all, I cannot deny the resulting bond between me and those who have moved on. We are now closer than ever, because we choose to be. I learned that so much of what has transpired over the course of the year is not about me personally even as I am directly affected. It is what it is. Others have made decisions that affected me very personally without ever knowing I was even in the equation, so in order to not get mired in the crap of feeling hurt and eventually being altered by it, I can choose to be affected, weigh out the good and bad and swim into the current. It is very much the same thing I had to do as a child when I was body surfing in the waves of North Carolina. An undercurrent would come in on occasion and begin pulling me under. My father had taught me to swim with current so as not to be exhausted by trying to swim out. Eventually by using the energy of the waves to assist me, I would be able to ride it out and away. I believe this time in my life is much like that. I had to learn to go with the under tow in order to not be drowned or overwhelmed by it.
This has not been the year I thought it would be. It doesn&#39;t resemble in the slightest the dreams I had for 2012. I have suffered in ways this year I could not possibly have seen coming. I have shaken all the fun out of the year, too. I found out I really don&#39;t give a damn what people think of me good or bad. I finally got it through my head their opinion is not the one that really counts, mine is.  As much as I would like everyone I meet to enjoy my company, to see and use my talents, to see my heart and the good intentions I start everyday with, the bottom line is if they do, it’s good, and if they don’t that is perfectly fine, too. If I can stand in the mirror knowing I did my best then I won’t wallow in the other. I know for sure I am living according to my choices, both good and bad. I know that the times I stood paralyzed not knowing what to choose, I was making a choice to do nothing. I know that life is what you put into it. I know that the next year will force me to climb out of my comfort zone and push me to do things I never thought I would try. If the Mayans are right and the end is near, I have had one hell of a ride this year, and will be going out with a bang. If by chance 2013 shows up in spite of all the hoopla, then I know I need to get ready for more growing pains. I tell my kids all the time, “Life is hard, wear a helmet.”  I plan on wearing something bedazzled with a lovely padded chin strap, because if I continue to grow at this pace, I will need all the protection I can get. It definitely needs to be better padded than the one I am sporting above. 
From me to you, Merry Christmas, Happy Holidays, Happy New Year, or just in case Pleasant Endings.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/12/my-2012-balance-sheet.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZyvglEO034wnWC0Rnr9fZ5hxJuvW-w1xTwQUWDfvRPtAao6kWgVw6V35nGYMhp_V7SbmoW7gsN3oLgCd-TpwEZZnnNo1ibl3pdfrundFgSos1YCVbfiybbeYQGzVz_l2gIjWULIUHea0/s72-c/Kellie+in+Santa+hat.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-4433854754140306423</guid><pubDate>Wed, 28 Nov 2012 12:28:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-11-28T06:28:17.194-06:00</atom:updated><title>Dear Kellie 11/26/15 - Monday, November 26, 2012 - Copyright 2007 Ourtribune.com</title><description>&lt;a href=&quot;http://www.ourtribune.com/article.php?id=14469#.ULYDVjk_ZZY.blogger&quot;&gt;Dear Kellie 11/26/15 - Monday, November 26, 2012 - Copyright 2007 Ourtribune.com&lt;/a&gt;</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/11/dear-kellie-112615-monday-november-26.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-8746530087567844679</guid><pubDate>Sat, 17 Nov 2012 01:53:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-11-16T19:53:23.639-06:00</atom:updated><title>Happy Thanksgiving?</title><description>Everyone keeps asking me what I am doing for Thanksgiving. With a blank stare and downward turned face, I answer, “Eating at home,” as if someone had just called me fat. It hurts like an insult would. In the last week I made the enormous decision to put my beloved dog down. I didn’t anguish over the decision for hours, I saw her weight loss, her inability to keep anything down, her blindness and her struggle to walk and I instantly made one of the largest decisions of my life. I am however anguishing about how I am supposed to cook a Thanksgiving dinner for just two people. I have no idea how to live the life I have been handed. It makes me feel odd, as if people looking at me know instinctively there is something wrong with me. I haven’t felt that way in a really long time. 
In 1998 I felt this awkward sense of not belonging to my own life. Danny had died the year before and so help me, I didn’t know how to live without him. I had to teach myself to do everything alone. I went out to eat alone, went to movies alone, went to the store alone, and picked out furniture alone. I did everything alone. I suppose in some ways I did this in order to prepare myself for spinsterhood. I had been reassured that I would end up alone because nobody would want to marry a single mom with four darling children. I thought that was crazy at first, but then I dated and realized the odds were not in my favor. 
Recently I realized I have so much more to learn about the person I am becoming. I had practiced living by myself, and yet since marrying Michael, it is as if I have forgotten how to do anything alone. It is such a weird notion that I have to re-learn the hard lessons I was sure I had conquered.  My truth in this is I like being married, not to just anybody, I proved with no uncertainty that I had to be married to a very specific kind of man, but married to Michael, well, it feels right. I like being his wife. I really like the way I am a better person when he is around. I am still me, but with Michael and his voice in my head I am calmer, wiser with our two heads, kinder with my overflowing time and abilities. With Michael I am more spherical, while alone I have pointy edges and a prickly exterior. I am more porcupine alone. 
The holidays are my favorite time of year. I love the decorations that start for me at Halloween and end at the New Year. This year I went all out for Halloween. I did it to be occupied and hide my quills. But Thanksgiving is different. There are no real decorations for Thanksgiving. It is all about gathering families and having a big meal together. It’s all about cooking for hours to feed the masses and falling down dead tired in front the television to watch and subsequently sleep during the hours of football. But this year I have no family to cook for, no men to insist on keeping score of their favorite teams. There will just be my eldest child and me, and just between us, I think she would rather be somewhere else. I can’t blame her; I understand that I have been just short of Miss Havisham. It’s hard to be around someone who is sad all the time.  Feeling somewhere between guilt and hope she will decide to eat Thanksgiving with me, bless her little heart. She has showed up every single time I have needed her. My goal for year’s end is to try and need her less.
Tomorrow I will go shopping for food for Thursday. Maybe a Cornish hen would do it. All I know for now, is I will not let this Thanksgiving go by without remembering how lucky I am to be missing everyone on Thanksgiving.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/11/happy-thanksgiving.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-4505096877749628535</guid><pubDate>Sat, 03 Nov 2012 14:40:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-11-03T09:43:07.598-05:00</atom:updated><title>At Season&#39;s End</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh61xcpmezIr4Iub91vYGQv239YcAd0U5EOC3h8fAAYsLIZGeeRcfDncLA6nNZdJI5sE-FBUMcT_6Wq5HP-20e3ehoW7DRof-jfNCFdfQCuCueLmp07-fZggE-ROvxM4DnB5mMbo4rFvGg/s1600/Lake+Erie+Sunset.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;283&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh61xcpmezIr4Iub91vYGQv239YcAd0U5EOC3h8fAAYsLIZGeeRcfDncLA6nNZdJI5sE-FBUMcT_6Wq5HP-20e3ehoW7DRof-jfNCFdfQCuCueLmp07-fZggE-ROvxM4DnB5mMbo4rFvGg/s400/Lake+Erie+Sunset.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;



I received some sad news, again this week, that another beloved aunt passed away. Michael&#39;s aunt passed away weeks ago, and my aunt passed away a few days ago. They were a wonderful constant presence for us. His aunt I grew close to from the start. I was twenty the first time we met. She was immediately kind to me, accepting, inclusive. Later, we met again when I was a single mother and Michael and I were dating. She continued her kindness. I felt no judgment from her, which was a sweet relief; because the thing about being a single mother is there is plenty of judgment, even from those who barely know you. I felt only acceptance, only kindness. Aunt Estelle told me about the family. I referred to her often as the history keeper.  She held within her memory all the family history. Her benevolence was not shared only with me, but all who she met. She was so smart, so involved in politics and the events of the day. Her activism had me captivated. 
My own aunt, Aunt Ginny was a very different personality, but just as important. Her influence was of family oriented education. She taught love every moment of her life. Her life was a difficult one, filled with grief and loss, yet she continued to softly, sweetly teach us all about eternal hope. She never gave way into the path of despair, or self pity. She reveled in all of our accomplishments and just wanted to be a part of the family, included in everything we were a part of, as well. 
These two very diverse women, so loving and kind gave everything of themselves for those they held dear. Both had suffered unthinkable losses and remained unchanged, undaunted in their determination to show empathy and compassion. I know from personal experience when one suffers an unthinkable blow; a “Y” in the road appears, to go left or right. One can decide to be forever altered, and give in to the despair, forever locked into the dance of sadness and grief, or one can decide, making an active choice to move forward, making sure to see those in similar pain, offering assistance and a shoulder when necessary. 
My daughter and I were discussing how some people come into our lives like seasons, not meaning to ever be permanent, but a temporary distraction in order to teach us something and then move on. It is in our late teens we discover for the first time what that truly feels like. It is disheartening, and clearly uncomfortable to have to let them go when the season ends. I have had many “friends” who were seasonal, becoming very close for a brief time until it became clear it was time for them to move on, either past me or through me, in order to travel their own journey. Some lessons left behind taught me what I wanted out of my life, and others made their distinction by teaching me what I did not want.  Either way, they had done their job and it was time to keep traveling forward in my own life as I continued to try to be a much better person because of the roads I have taken rather than get mired in the mud, stuck in time and space, wrapped in guilt and grief.
Michael and my aunts were lifers, those wonderfully loving individuals who stuck with us until the bitter end. They were in it for the long haul. We have lived long enough to know that just because someone is listed as family doesn’t mean they have to stick by you. Hard earned experiences have taught us to feel eternally grateful to those who have. These beautiful women gave us their hearts. They shared their minds and forgave us our sins.  They remained people we could call in good and bad times and without judgment, without cynicism, they would reel us back into the reality of love.
There really are no words for the loss we have suffered. I believe there is a finite group of people who love us for exactly who we are, regardless of our faults. This love, this all encompassing warmth, is one we all take for granted at some point in our lives until we are old enough to understand just how remarkable it is. As my beloved and I age, we are forced to let go of more and more of the finite group of family, whether by blood or choice, who are at an age when their work is done and it is time for them to rest.
The world is a little cooler for us now asmwe are laying our loved ones to rest. The work for us continues to carry on their legacy. If we take anything away from these heartbreaks, let us keep in the forefront of our minds that kindness matters. Let us always choose good over easy, compassion over judgment, and warmth over cold indifference. We were taught firsthand how it is done to perfection, and we cannot un-ring that bell.
Today, I carry Aunt Estelle and Aunt Ginny with me. Within me there remains capacity for growth, time for compassion, and room for love. I wish them as much love as they have given us all these years as they remain peacefully surrounded in light. When we feel discouraged their voices will be heard in our hearts and minds.
</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/11/at-seasons-end.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEh61xcpmezIr4Iub91vYGQv239YcAd0U5EOC3h8fAAYsLIZGeeRcfDncLA6nNZdJI5sE-FBUMcT_6Wq5HP-20e3ehoW7DRof-jfNCFdfQCuCueLmp07-fZggE-ROvxM4DnB5mMbo4rFvGg/s72-c/Lake+Erie+Sunset.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-818416062986566520</guid><pubDate>Sun, 23 Sep 2012 02:37:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-09-22T21:37:22.596-05:00</atom:updated><title>A Little Haunted</title><description>&quot;Those who dream by night, in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that all was vanity; but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, and make it possible.&quot;

- T.E. Lawrence (Lawrence of Arabia)
This is the quote from the final episode of the The Rosanne show. There are several quotes from that last show I really like. 
My favorite quotes came from the monologue at the very end, a show I did not see in it&#39;s entirety until tonight. I never knew how the series ended because it ended in 1997, the year Danny died. It is one of my gap years, a year filled with nothing but work, crisis and kids. I have had a few of those gap years, where my memory has some rather remarkable gaps because I had neither the time nor the will to hang onto anything that wasn&#39;t absolutely necessary. 
I did something rather unusual for me today, I took the entire day off. I did not work any of my multiple jobs, I didn&#39;t do housework, or laundry or mow the lawn. Instead I opted to sit on my sizable butt and watch the The Rosanne Show marathon. I stayed on my couch and let my brain completely shut off for awhile. You see I am a little haunted right now and my brain being what it is, is working overtime trying to make all the scattered pieces fit in some way. I have remnants of the recent ghosts in my life. September is the month Danny died so I always feel a little haunted, but now with so many others from our family gone, it seems as though the ghosts are everywhere. I have been finding pennies everyday now for weeks. I have even found fifteen dollars in fives in the grocery store parking lot. At first I thought Danny was trying to tell me something. If you have read my book, you know what I mean by that. If you haven&#39;t please understand, I cannot tell that story any better than I did in the book. As I picked up coin after coin, I wondered what the significance was. Before, when I would find them, the dates held some significance, but now they seem random, every year of my life represented in copper. My mind then shifted to the idea that maybe he was just trying to help me feel less alone. In that way, I guess he has been successful because every time I find one I think of him and smile and for a second forget how alone I really am.
As I watched the very last episode of the show and saw how she tied it all together, and I felt tied to TV Rosanne. When the series first started I was married to Danny and we were a blue collar family. We had no money to speak of and our little family was trying to get by. It was nostalgia that had me glued to the couch today watching a show that represented the eighties for the working middle class. Danny and I had laughed so hard at the ridiculously funny bits, sitting together watching, relaxing in the evening after a hard day&#39;s work. 
I had lost track of most the television shows in the nineties. My time was stretched too thin to watch much of anything but a very few programs I had to schedule in. Rosanne was one the shows that didn&#39;t make the cut. Maybe I let it go because it reminded me too much of being with Danny. So, I never knew how thing went for TV Rosanne until today. The ending was fitting where I am right now, in my haunted state. The quote below is brilliant, and in all of Rosanne&#39;s shenanigans  I think she has been under appreciated for what a brilliant writer she is in real life. I have such an appreciation for the grasp she had on being a middle class wife in a time in history when women were expected to do the impossible with no time and less money. 
&quot;As a modern wife, I walked a tight rope between tradition and progress, and usually, I failed, by one outsider&#39;s standards or another&#39;s. But I figured out that neither winning nor losing count for women like they do for men. We women are the one&#39;s who transform everything we touch. And nothing on earth is higher than that. My writing&#39;s really what got me through the last year after Dan died. I mean at first I felt so betrayed as if he had left me for another women. When you&#39;re a blue-collar woman and your husband dies it takes away your whole sense of security.&quot;
In 1997, when this originally aired it said exactly how I felt. I sort of wish now I had seen it, maybe then I would felt &quot;seen&quot;. But in some ways this is better, with hindsight behind me and so much time gone now. 
My youngest son will be having a birthday in a few days. He turned seven years old in 1997, two days before his father died. Buying Tom cars for his birthday was the last gift Danny ever gave. I believe he willed himself to live to see Tom turn seven. Tom usually doesn&#39;t want to celebrate his birthday because, I think, for him it is almost disrespectful to take any attention away from his father. I being his mother, disagree and want to focus on the fact that his father so loved him, ravaged by cancer managed to be there for his son on the day we loved to celebrate. Tom&#39;s birth was the easiest, the most relaxed. Dan and I got to breathe deep and enjoy the first few hours of our son&#39;s life. He came out on time. He wasn&#39;t much of crier, matter of fact he smiled when he was only hours old. It wasn&#39;t gas, he looked at us, worked so hard to focus his tiny wandering eyes and then his face would break slowly into a wide smile and stay that way until we smiled back.
Yes, nostalgic is what I have been for a little while now. The ghosts remind me so much of the past it is hard not wander back in time and remember what life was like when the kids were tiny and life revolved around &quot;sandwich night&quot;.
My Michael always gives me room in September to feel anyway I want. This year, he is too far to do anything different, another ghost. We talked tonight in low tones about how I am feeling, how he is feeling and what we need to do to try and fix our current conundrum, realizing of course, the best laid plans and all...
I told him I am planning a Halloween party. He will not be able to be here for it. As I tell him of my plans we both sigh. One or the other of us inevitably says, &quot;It is what it is&quot; and we try and let it go. I told Michael since I am feeling haunted anyway, I might as well put it to good use and throw a party. He agreed it is a good idea to allow the ghosts to wander freely rather than to try and chase them.
I suppose some may think my day was completely wasted sitting and watching a show that is fifteen years old, but I defend my time spent today. I needed to fall back for awhile and gather strength from my past. Today was not so much about what I have lost as much as it was about what I have learned. I am not the same person I was in 1997, I am so much more now. Back then I didn&#39;t know how to take care of myself, but now I do. Back then I didn&#39;t have the capacity for love that I have now. Now I can forgive so much easier, too. I realized today exactly how far I have come. I remember dreaming of the day when I would love someone and they would have the utter audacity to openly love me back. I remember dreaming of becoming a writer, and well, here I am. I had dreams, lots and lots of dreams. It was those dreams that got me through the really dark days. It is my dreams that get me through the darkness now. They are the beacon that lights up the shadowy hallways, illuminating my way, past the ghosts. Today was a day of reflection, resolution and more dreaming.







</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/09/a-little-haunted.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-6301537460052147725</guid><pubDate>Mon, 10 Sep 2012 01:38:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-09-09T20:38:55.874-05:00</atom:updated><title>So Much Change</title><description>So much has happened in the last several weeks...again. Every time I am on my own, change comes sweeping in and altering my universe. An acquaintance said to me, &quot;Change is inevitable, Kellie.&quot; Oh thank God your here to clear that up. Here I was thinking that everything I have ever known would be exactly the same year after year. Whew! I can finally put that existentialist question to bed. Look, I know I am being incredibly sarcastic, but really not as sarcastic as that useless comment. I know change happens, as does shit, and stuff. What has been happening to me, yes, I wrote &lt;i&gt;to me&lt;/i&gt;, is more than the inevitable change. It&#39;s breath taking, not view type breath taking, more of the &#39;Oh dear God who did I piss off&#39;, kind of breath taking. 
Back in 1998, the year we were recovering from Danny&#39;s passing from cancer, I became acute aware of things I know for fact I never thought twice about. I began to notice people&#39;s expressions more, my surroundings, things that were done and said and things that were ignored. I had begun noticing everything around me whether it was a bug, or a human. I noticed how the wind blew, in what direction, whether or not it made the leaves swirl or merely fall off the tree. I noticed how not everyone was kind, or compassionate. See, up until then I had never been at the brunt of a true tragedy, so I had no life experience with how people acted or reacted. 1998 was the year I learned who I could count on and who I should let go. I had growing pains that year. In some ways I truly suffered, but in others the experience was priceless. 
I am living in a year right now that is as close to 1998 as I have had since my year of growing pains. I have pains again this year. I am being stretched to my very end, and some days I feel as though I may very well snap. Each day I get up and think, &quot;Just let me get through it.&quot; I haven&#39;t thought that way since my 1998 &#39;let&#39;s see how far we can push Kellie&#39; year. This year I am once again being pushed, stretched, pulled in several directions at once to see if I will eventually snap. So far so good, and I remain intact. I am bruised, certainly battered and physically weaker due to a weird heart thing that began happening. I am under a doctors care about my heart. She has tested, talked counseled and directed me in the way I can take care of me, so the weird heart thing goes away. 
There is a condition called &quot;broken heart syndrome&quot;, a condition that happens usually after a death of loved one or some extreme stress. The heart goes into cardiomyopathy, and feels much like a heart attack. When I woke up in a cold sweat on a Sunday night, sat bolt upright clutching my chest, my first &lt;i&gt;sight&lt;/i&gt; was &#39;The Kardashions&#39;, evidently they had sneaked up on the screen after I fell asleep. My first &lt;i&gt;thought&lt;/i&gt; was, &quot;Oh, no one should have to die like this!&quot;
I waited until morning and went to see my doctor. We had a long conversation about my insomnia, a long standing problem that had recently gotten worse leaving me awake for 22 of the 24 hour period in a day. I usually clocked in at least 4 hours, but recently I had dropped down to 2 hours a night. I was exhausted, stressed out and becoming hopeless. You see I believe my heart is broken. I believe that psychology becomes pathology when left untreated. I cannot tell you if I had broken heart syndrome. I know my heart was not functioning, which left me with uncharacteristically large ankles, or kankles as some may know them. I know I would feel as though someone was bouncing around a basketball in my chest when I should have been fast asleep. I know that this summer has left me feeling battered, beaten and very very tired. And a little hopeless at times. 
I did all my necessary health stuff and found out my thyroid has decided to give up. Poor thing has been fighting a long hard battle without the necessary hormones for support, so I guess it was inevitable, you know, like change. I decided for me, for Mike and my sanity that limbo is not my forte. I forced a conversation and we made a decision. That decision has freed me up to start feeling like a human again. That one very large, life altering decision has made it possible for me to start thinking about moving on through all the changes instead of just enduring them. 
Michael came home and I was holding him so tight in my arms. I was breathing him, tasting his lips, inhaling his smell, touching his face. I was taking in all of him so I could carry him with me as we go through another set of very large changes. I heard my heart beat in tandem with his. The two seemed to instantly recognize the other and fall in sync.
I can&#39;t say I will never be brokenhearted again. I can&#39;t say I will handle the new changes with grace and poise, I mean let&#39;s be real, it&#39;s still me we are talking about. But I can say, that whatever change is on it&#39;s way, there will be two hearts to take it on.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/09/so-much-change.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-8896345269364014299</guid><pubDate>Sun, 02 Sep 2012 17:59:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-09-02T12:59:25.394-05:00</atom:updated><title>An Open Letter To My Sons</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhAj0fm5MzmRCLzdA2XSFdPH3sP1eWXa0SVY-JrYGzd1ImCdZ3BHjMpwM8SVa-pJ3EwX9papKiRk2hjlg_7VXVYWm1ciqHzI4rDuvkWnBEm_sDQnMDEoU1G_9Iw9d1T31k_u-cLi3h-Cgs/s1600/betty9.JPG&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;267&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhAj0fm5MzmRCLzdA2XSFdPH3sP1eWXa0SVY-JrYGzd1ImCdZ3BHjMpwM8SVa-pJ3EwX9papKiRk2hjlg_7VXVYWm1ciqHzI4rDuvkWnBEm_sDQnMDEoU1G_9Iw9d1T31k_u-cLi3h-Cgs/s400/betty9.JPG&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;


To my darling boys, loves of my life, breadth of my very soul, you have made me so very proud, so very happy, and so ultimately privileged to have you in my life. For decades now, I have had you in my life every day, seeing you grow, watching your successes, your failures, your heartbreak, and your abounding love. It seems unimaginable to me, that we will be apart. I have tried for days to wrap my brain around letting you go, allowing you to fly as you need to, yet feeling my heart hurt thinking of your absence. I know, cognitively I know, that this must be for now. I have seen how much you need to move on, move through me, to be the men you were born to be. It is my greatest hope that I am never the one who holds you down or back or keeps you from the future you have earned and desire. It is impossible for me to even think I could be happy not seeing you, sharing your world, having long talks on the patio about big life decisions, but even the most impossible at times must become possible in order for you to continue your journey. 
While it’s true this makes the tears fall down my face, know in your heart that I love you too much to want anything but the very best for you. I want you to be happy; above all else, you deserve to be happy.  So not only will I not stand in your way, but I will assist you in your journey any way I can. That is the very description of motherly love, to allow your children to grow to their full potential in order for them to be happy, fulfilled, and loved. You are such good men, kind men, decent human beings. I am proud of how you have chosen those things, on your own. I have tried to teach you all I know, when I think about it, it could fit in a thimble. I tried my level best to show you the love I was always certain you deserved. I tried to be both mother and father after your father was no longer here to show you how to be a man. I married a man who I was certain loved you and would support you in your life. He loves you so much. He too is so very proud of you and this big leap you have decided to take for yourselves. 
The days you were born were some of the happiest of my life. You were born perfect. You both immediately bonded to each other, so it is no surprise that this journey is one you will make together. And that too makes me happy.
This is my best piece of advice for you as you go off on your own: Be kind to yourself. Guard the life I have guarded so long. Forgive your transgressions, and allow yourselves your humanity. You must first own love in order to truly give it to others. Do not accept others negative or hurtful remarks or actions. It means nothing and has nothing at all to do with you or who you are. Let go of any hate mistakenly thrown your way. To hold on to it will only hurt you and use up your future. Do not waste your time on it. Remember, it means nothing. Be kind to those who have less in love, money, or life. It is in our decency to others that we show our true character. Be who you were born to be. Find compassion for those in need. Give to the poor, teach the ignorant, and help the helpless. You were born to be leaders of men; you will accomplish this by showing the world how a real man behaves. Say how you feel, follow your instincts and love deeply, even if it means getting hurt. Regret comes from not participating in your own life. Be fearless in your life; it is the one and nearly the only thing that ever truly belongs to you. Live as if failure were impossible. Speak thoughtfully, listen frequently, and take the time to enjoy the now. Revel in your friendships, laugh out loud in theaters, sing in public and dance in a parking lot under the lights and stars (I promise you, in the winter, you will feel the magic of it to your bones.) 
Remember where you came from. Those who paved this wonderful road for you did so out of love, hope and the promise of better days ahead. Take time to spend with family, and learn the history of them. Be the sponge in the room and listen closely to the stories. They are stories you will one day pass along to your own children. Respect the sacrifices of your grandparents, parents and yourselves. Make this time in your life count. Create your own future. See it in your mind’s eye and then take the steps to see it through to completion. I believe mind, body and soul that you can accomplish anything you choose.
Most importantly, remember that I have loved you every day of your life and will love you for eternity, for love like the one I hold for you have no bounds from time or space or earthly laws. And look for the pennies. They are out there, and if you pay attention they will speak to you. Your father continues to love you from where he is. 
God speed my darlings, my loves. May God hold you in the palm of His hand until we meet again. 
Yours now and always,
Mama</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/09/an-open-letter-to-my-sons.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhAj0fm5MzmRCLzdA2XSFdPH3sP1eWXa0SVY-JrYGzd1ImCdZ3BHjMpwM8SVa-pJ3EwX9papKiRk2hjlg_7VXVYWm1ciqHzI4rDuvkWnBEm_sDQnMDEoU1G_9Iw9d1T31k_u-cLi3h-Cgs/s72-c/betty9.JPG" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-6907681632952425281</guid><pubDate>Sun, 19 Aug 2012 18:26:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-08-19T13:26:44.190-05:00</atom:updated><title>I Can Hear the Wings But I Can&#39;t See the Hummingbird</title><description>I recently put out my hummingbird feeders. I have several that I used to diligently put out at my old house. Since we moved a couple of years ago, I have been rather lazy about putting out food for any other animals than the ones who currently reside inside the house. This year I felt the need to try and entice my hummers to visit. 
My feeders would draw the hummingbirds, several at a time, doing their tactical maneuvers, wooshing past me and the lazy dogs sleeping in the sun. I would spend hours just watching them, amazed at their tiny frames doing what I was certain were physically impossible stunts. I love hummingbirds, their rather gruff chirping for such delicate creatures and their incessant need to guard the foodstuff, although as I wrote earlier, was plentiful. I do not own single piece of hummingbird paraphernalia. You will not see one hummingbird gooby in my house. I love the real ones, the ones who fly in to our area in the spring and disappear after September. I do not have a good or bad reason for not hanging my feeders here at this house until now. Maybe it is my lack of motivation to commit, or my need to keep things very simple while I am on my own. Maybe I wanted to wallow in my solitude, until now. Maybe my age had allowed me to forget I even had feeders until I recently went through some unattended boxes. Whatever reason I had, either consciously or subconsciously, it no longer matters, because the feeders out and the hummers are here. Now is what matters, right? We planted fruiting trees, blooming shrubs and vines that crawl the length of our fence. This foliage, while providing us shade and cooler air, also provide the environment for butterflies, geckos and now hummingbirds. All these delectable plants that are growing, blooming, sprouting off shoots are changing our yard into a haven for the tiny wildlife I so adore. Inside the arboretum that is our back yard, I have witnessed the largest butterflies I have ever seen. These mammoth winged beauties float around our yard. The day I buried my beloved cat, a long haired black and white lion king, I had put the last shovel of dirt on his grave when floating by me so close as to nearly touch me, a giant black and white butterfly landed on our blooming sweet almond verbena. My tears mixed with awe as I watched it fly around our yard and then disappear over the roof line. A sign, I thought, that Matches could see the love and return it without ever being present as he once was. 
One day as I sat outside in the humid air, sipping iced coffee, taking in natures sights and sounds, when a group of butterflies, I believe there were about five of them, began flying in a circle inside our gazebo. I sat grinning ear to ear, watching as they gracefully followed the circle as if they were attempting nothing more than to entertain me. It was magical. The only person I wanted to share this with was the one person with whom I have the least amount of time. I could call him, describe the beauty, the magic, the wonder of the moment, but I knew it would not be the same for him as it was for me. 
I have this toad, my friend, I now refer to as Mr. Toad, yes in reference to his wild ride, comes out of hiding every morning to sit with me while I have coffee. I turn on the outside light and the bugs all come and gather. Mr. Toad hops out to enjoy a hearty breakfast as I watch him gobble one insect after another. When my coffee time is finished and it is time to go back in to get ready for the day, he hops back from where he came. Much like my alarm clock, this early morning meeting has become inevitable.
I have this tie to the nature that has come to our garden. I am respectfully staying a safe distance in order to allow them their confidence, while they entertain me for hours with what I think may be their mundane tasks. I sat one morning thinking of what it would be like if some creature were far above me watching my mundane tasks. would that creature find me as entertaining, as awe inspiring? Would vacuuming be equally as impressive to someone of a much larger intellect? Probably not, but the thought amused me, and if nothing else, being amused is something I need, so I allowed it. 
The caterpillars that ate my passion vine are now butterflies. The grubs that Bobo so likes to chew on, are now full grown beetles. The baby geckos that once took shelter in our small planters are now mating. They are evolving by leaps and bounds over the last few months, as have I. The hummers are here for another month and then they will migrate further south for the winter. I must take the time to watch them now, before they go and the feeders go back into storage. I wondered where I would be living in the next migratory season. I wondered if the feeders would ever make their way out of the large plastic container to be filled and hung, as  lay in wait for the tiny birds to arrive. 
This weekend while Michael was home, we had to have several large, looming conversations. It was draining, scary, vulnerable, indecisive. These talks were everything I have come to hate about talking. I am not as comfortable at throwing myself bare, as one might think. But much like taking the garbage out, it had to be done. It was a group of kitchen sink talks. We had to discuss everything including the kitchen sink. Today it is about Dan and his birthday, making cookies, cooking a favorite meal. We stop for a few moments, and he takes my hand. He looks at me full in the face, and I see every word, every feeling, every fear, anxiety, hope and dream. There will be more conversations, more talking, and I will be better prepared. I promised him and me that this period of time will not be wasted, will not be misused, but rather respected for the changes it will inevitably bring. I will not be able to transform into a butterfly, and one would think that would be a fair outcome of all this growth. I will however take a lesson from them and remember it is up to me whether or not I can fly.&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuPdXWa1_TfgmNkHSgivO_mpFgS70AYX0O8BIPX3C0okTu4PMrv5JyTHt9G1BiU6n4oYsA_4P6IQnr2832BNYiw12CvrbElnGOwgmySmxBUa2JgkIexFuFBuRLwhyphenhyphenUpgUtMnBQNu5PSWs/s1600/Mr.+Toad.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;387&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuPdXWa1_TfgmNkHSgivO_mpFgS70AYX0O8BIPX3C0okTu4PMrv5JyTHt9G1BiU6n4oYsA_4P6IQnr2832BNYiw12CvrbElnGOwgmySmxBUa2JgkIexFuFBuRLwhyphenhyphenUpgUtMnBQNu5PSWs/s400/Mr.+Toad.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;

</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/08/i-can-hear-wings-but-i-cant-see.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiuPdXWa1_TfgmNkHSgivO_mpFgS70AYX0O8BIPX3C0okTu4PMrv5JyTHt9G1BiU6n4oYsA_4P6IQnr2832BNYiw12CvrbElnGOwgmySmxBUa2JgkIexFuFBuRLwhyphenhyphenUpgUtMnBQNu5PSWs/s72-c/Mr.+Toad.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-6800344706644806092</guid><pubDate>Sun, 05 Aug 2012 16:57:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-08-05T11:58:39.276-05:00</atom:updated><title>No Ifs, Ands, or Guts</title><description>I have been trying to let go and let God. The &quot;why?&quot; is still looming large, with no answer or logic. Logic is what I have come to depend on in my own decision making, sometimes to my own demise. I listen to my gut when logic is nowhere to be seen, but I fear that may be the wrong approach. I am beginning to understand that logic, my logic, should be reserved for the times when my gut has gone quiet. So much of what my eyes see and my ears take in is illogical, so why I am depending on something that is virtually nonexistent in my tactile world? It&#39;s the nurse in me, I suppose, who depends on symptoms, when I think this is the time to depend more on signs. Signs and symptoms are what all nurses depend on in order to make the best possible decision, usually in the most dire circumstances, but I am not seeing all the signs, because I am bogged down with symptoms. Here is what  mean, I will see an angry student, hear them insult me, watch their face contort, feel the unpleasantness of their proximity, but I am missing the sign of their actual distress. They are not angry at me, hell, they do not even know me. They are fearful of how they are going to pay their bills. The signs all point to fear and anxiety.  While they feel they have no time to take a breath and think things through, the truth is I have all the time in the world to do that in order to help them because I am outside the situation. I am learning this lesson everyday. It&#39;s one thing to listen, but to take in what someone is saying, really see them beyond their exterior facade, well, I am learning to do that with my contemporaries like I used to have to do with my old folks. That is the thing about the elderly and children when you work in medicine; they usually are unable to verbally express their concerns, so I used to be dependent on other senses, my gut, for instance, in figuring out the best way to help them. Since I have been retired I have gotten sloppy. I may even have gotten more judgmental, which I find to be unacceptable. Who am I to judge someone for their decisions, barring any great acts of violence, when I am clearly just as human, just as flawed, just as insecure as the next person? 
So I made the decision to actively be reticent to judge, to shy away from  knee jerk responses from myself, as well as others. It takes practice and lots of it. Anger is an easy out. Being a terminal victim is an easy out, an uncomfortable one, but it is the path least resistance, and in the end will stunt personal growth, possibly for a lifetime. It&#39;s time for me to not think things through, but to feel my way. I have thought things to death over the last year and have not come up with what I feel to be an acceptable path to follow. So if thinking is off the table then feeling, following my senses, getting out of the way of myself, is the next step to finding out where I am going. It&#39;s not my first time at this rodeo. My last one had me falling on my ass more often than not, but I will say, I tried so many things I had been scared of because I let the logical cat out of the bag.
 Here is the scarier question I have been asking myself, &quot;Have I taught my children to deduce their way, through logical and critical thinking, into a place of fear, instead of joyful leaping? Have I taught them to be so careful, that they no longer see the merit in spontaneity?&quot; I have thought about that a lot since my youngest son moved out. Did I talk at him so long about the possible consequences that I ignored his need for adventure and willingness to accept the risk? And what of the saying, &quot;with great risk comes great reward?&quot; Oh my... You see with all the book learning I have done, with all the constant feeding of my brain, I may have forgotten to feed the rest of me, therefore starving my kids gut feelings as well. 
So there it is, my next step in learning may very well be not in a book, or classroom, but rather by listening to others, without judgment, and listening to my own body as it attempts to speak up even when I try and drown it out with logic. 
What Michael and I are experiencing is unpleasant, at best, but what if I am to take this time to focus on things I need in order to feed me? What if he is in this experience to find out where he wants to go in the near future (uh, with me in tow, of course)? What if the lesson is not about his job, or moving, or even if we have been grateful enough, a ridiculous thought for us at this point, but rather to take our individual selves to the next level, meeting once again together on a higher plane, one that does not have a company logo on it? I like it, this idea that I will not have to think so hard, so much about an insurmountable problem I cannot solve. So far today, by following my gut and not getting all anxiety ridden about real estate, job changes and kids, I have gotten more accomplished than I have in weeks. By letting go of my problems, by following instinct rather than thought process, I have gotten to the store, done laundry, walked the dogs, taken the recycling to the center, spent time outside reading a gardening magazine and written this blog. My gut says to go easy on me, my plate is full, so I shall. My gut full of fresh produce, is now wanting to spend time at the pool, soak up some sun, read a book later, clean out the fridge and pack my lunch for work tomorrow. My gut says things will be fine, eventually. My inner instinct tells me I have been through worse, and this time alone should not be wasted crying because it exists. So the next time someone comes at me all crazy, calling me thoughtless, my response will be, &quot;I know, right? Isn&#39;t it marvelous?&quot;</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/08/i-have-been-trying-to-let-go-and-let-god.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-2628429812356939221</guid><pubDate>Fri, 27 Jul 2012 17:17:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-07-27T12:17:34.673-05:00</atom:updated><title>2 1/2 Dads</title><description>A couple of nights ago my son and I were out talking in the courtyard. It was really late, about 2 am, when he said something I thought was at first odd and then I thought it was about the nicest thing he had ever said. We were talking about how he has the best of both of his dad’s personality traits. I refer to him as our Sheldon, referring to the character on “The Big Bang Theory”. Sheldon is unrelenting in his need to be right, his need to keep certain things his and his alone, like his spot. That describes my eldest son perfectly. A geek in every way, he is acutely aware of if anyone touches any of his belongings, will fight to the death over his usual seat and is certain when he is right. Our Sheldon got so much of his anal retentive personality from his father. His father had certain things that if not done correctly drove him nuts. Fold his socks the wrong way and you ended up getting a 35 minute tutorial. Trust me when I say it was easier to do those wacky, seemingly nothing things his way. For me being married to him, it all seemed as if it were in the roommate agreement. If you watch the show you will understand. I see Dan in our son every day. Mike is in there too. My son has acquired all kinds of traits from Mike, some which drive me batty, others I just smile, knowing he is the perfect combination of the two men. 
What my son said was, “I am so lucky, I had 2 ½ fathers.” I stared at him for minute completely confused. I kept doing what I was sure the most basic math and always came out with the answer of two. “Where do you get the ½?” I asked puzzled. “Well, I started out with Dad, and then got Mike and in the mean time I had you. You are the half.” My eyes rolled up inside my head searching for the meaning when he said, “Look, you are kind of a dude. Every one of my friends knows what a beast you are.” It was then I smiled, building to a laugh. I have been referred to as a beast, thug, and a dude. It is not the impression I had hoped would be my legacy, but I had to admit that I knew where it came from. I have stood nose to chest with my sons stating with great conviction, “Brought ya in, take your ass out.” I meant it, too. 
&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlkIUqAw1-bWprImu0djVP-znUMSbWBf3ieWA5epebEOk1d6tpWYWsn322-CJZ2bDyYXJABwvW1J27rSuJ8zuH_js4hyphenhyphenZKlSCIvAclPFd-QCBwlUmW-MFPzUhrirk9MjLDwb3Nc_SLJLI/s1600/Dan.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;316&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlkIUqAw1-bWprImu0djVP-znUMSbWBf3ieWA5epebEOk1d6tpWYWsn322-CJZ2bDyYXJABwvW1J27rSuJ8zuH_js4hyphenhyphenZKlSCIvAclPFd-QCBwlUmW-MFPzUhrirk9MjLDwb3Nc_SLJLI/s400/Dan.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;





I have been pressed at times from outsiders to show my worth as a mother, father and a fighter. I didn’t understand until after Dan had died how not having a father figure made kids vulnerable to outsiders, especially other adults. I had been shocked by how adults would bully my kids and me if I didn’t stand as tall as I could, as puffy as I could, defending all of us. I learned that lesson the hard way and never forgot. I had witnessed people who should have behaved better, push their way into our lives and trying to do emotional harm to my kids, for no other reason then there was no big, strong man to defend them. I always knew how important dads were, but this made it crystal clear to me that kids without dads had a much harder time in social circumstances. What ended up happening to me was I morphed into a hybrid of both father and mother. When needed I could stand up to the biggest coach, tallest teacher, scariest priest, most condescending principal and kick verbal ass if I had to, but I never had to get physical.  Had I been pushed further to defend my kids, I probably would have gone the distance. Once during an altercation with a neighbor it nearly came to blows. Win, lose or draw, I was ready to be the man of the house. It was one of the few times my kids were absolutely speechless. I charged like a wild bull and the neighbor fled, sputtering profanities from a safe distance. It was after that my reputation of being the hybrid started to grow. My kids knew I was no push over and if you dared to try and do any kind of damage in any way shape or form to my kids, you had better be prepared for the dad in me. When those few moments happened, I surprised myself at my own strength. The really fascinating part was my voice dropped a solid octave when I was really pissed. 
My boy was right, I guess, he had 2 ½ fathers. I, being the half, evidently made me full of tiger blood. I looked at my man/child. He is becoming so much more than I could have hoped. My mind rifles through memories as I gaze at his chiseled features, remembering him as a very small boy, so sweet, so innocent, when no one had died, or moved, or changed. He is a good man, a man with shared traits of all who came before him. Although, I only got credit for a half, I am in very good company with Mike and his dad. It is probably the best compliment he could have given me. It is certainly one I will always remember.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/07/2-12-dads.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjlkIUqAw1-bWprImu0djVP-znUMSbWBf3ieWA5epebEOk1d6tpWYWsn322-CJZ2bDyYXJABwvW1J27rSuJ8zuH_js4hyphenhyphenZKlSCIvAclPFd-QCBwlUmW-MFPzUhrirk9MjLDwb3Nc_SLJLI/s72-c/Dan.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-4120494428302574288</guid><pubDate>Sun, 15 Jul 2012 11:22:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-11-11T05:42:54.635-06:00</atom:updated><title>Hell on Earth</title><description>So the idea was to write about our trip to New Orleans, and one day I will, but for now all hell broke loose and I am trying to get it back in its pen. My last couple of weeks, since the day after we got back from New Orleans, to be precise, life got hard. It got the kind of hard that breaks hearts and causes throbbing headaches. The very day Michael went back to his other home in Chicago, the air conditioner broke. It was a balmy 105 degrees. Having pets that are heat sensitive, I spent the day passing out ice packs and running fans in every corner of the room. Yes, I had to go out and buy fans, an expense that although was not an account drainer, was still unexpected and a pain. The next evening, more than 24 hours later it was fixed. Luckily, it was a simple thing that needed nothing further for now. The next travesty to come was the fender bender in my own driveway. One child hit another child&#39;s car and then proceeded to have a complete breakdown at midnight on July 4th. We had fireworks of a completely different kind.  After making a loud and out of control scene, we all went to our respective corners. My cat, my lion king, suddenly had out of control diarrhea, leaving him and my bathroom a smelly, disgusting mess. At first, we all thought it was a stomach virus, a small and inconvenient thing. &quot;Stinkopotamus better not come in my room,&quot; called my eldest daughter. She made many jokes with me making me laugh as we surveyed our very sick cat. We both knew he was in trouble. Had she not made me laugh, I would have probably cried for a week. Four days later I had to call the hospital to take him in to put him down. At twenty, he didn&#39;t owe anyone a damn thing. As I sat outside getting myself together enough to make the trip, my youngest son informed me that he was moving out, quite suddenly, and with what I thought was a ludicrous plan. Stunned, I sat staring at him trying to comprehend what he had just said. He had been making plans to move out and had failed to let me in on any of it. I had been blindsided. Thoroughly pissed, I got up from my seat and said, &quot;I have to go kill my cat now,&quot; and left with Matches wrapped in a towel. In retrospect, after many conversations with his siblings, who I must say, had a very reasonable tone and demeanor, I decided to stop being angry and let go. I do not understand why things had to come down the way they did, like he was escaping from Alcatraz, but they did and now he is off in the world either going to make it, or not. At 21 years old, a man, he is on his own to figure out what he wants for himself. It is not the way I would have done it, or even understand why it went this way, but it did, and I found myself nursing another wound to my heart. He does not see why I am a little brokenhearted about how it all came down. He thinks I am controlling, while I think he is being thoughtless. He thinks I want to stifle him, while I think he doesn&#39;t plan enough. We are at an impasse for now. Michael talks to him, calmly, I might add, while I cannot. For now, I just can&#39;t. I don&#39;t think it is for lack of love, but rather lack of understanding of the others viewpoint. As his mother there will never be a day when I am completely objective. Where he sees adventure, I see danger. Where he sees possibility, I see homelessness and despair. I will grant you this makes me sound like a giant piss pot, and to that point I will concede. I have always looked very far down the road and pointed out hidden dangers to my children, terrified they might not recover from a devastating misstep. But as a human, I know how unhappy he has been, how lost he has felt, uncomfortable in his skin. This may be the very thing he needs to start doing for him in ways unexpected and happy. My toilet leaked and then proceeded to flood. At first it only flooded at night, and then it began to flood in earnest all day long. I would have to turn off the water every time I had to pee. I had tried to find where the leak was coming from, to no avail. Mike fixed it in about 20 minutes yesterday, when it had taken me all week to putter, being completely unable to diagnose the problem. With all this going on, Michael had been away. I was on my own to do what I had not done for 11 years, run my household alone. I was sitting outside with Michael talking quietly about how I had gotten my ass kicked at every turn for two weeks, now. Tears fell down my sagging face, past the large bags that hung under my weary eyes. &#39;I remember now what being on my own felt like and why I hated it so much. You would think I would be better at with all that practice.&quot; Michael hugged me, &quot;It&#39;s a lot for anyone to handle, too much in fact.&quot; Yep, it was all too much to deal with at once. I have slept more the last two days than I have in weeks. At one point, I had not slept more than eight hours in three days. 
I will write about my trip to New Orleans and all the newly formed perspective I garnered from that trip, I will. But for now, with embers still glowing from previous fires that had to be extinguished by me while I was alone, I am going to take full advantage of Michael being home and rest. I want to stock pile all the sleep and comfort I can just in case, Hell decides to escape, break loose, causing more chaos and wreaking havoc. I looked at my Michael darling, &quot;Never leave me again.&quot; He said soft in my ear, &quot;I never really do.&quot;</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/07/hell-on-earth.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><thr:total>0</thr:total></item><item><guid isPermaLink="false">tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7803587074038195839.post-5177041873068753552</guid><pubDate>Sun, 08 Jul 2012 14:34:00 +0000</pubDate><atom:updated>2012-07-08T09:56:02.536-05:00</atom:updated><title>The Long Life of the Lion King</title><description>&lt;div class=&quot;separator&quot; style=&quot;clear: both; text-align: center;&quot;&gt;
&lt;a href=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgs7I_MuZ9CNhQHuVM8xh-esMD1WXuEsFXj_TiSxubBpC8XvAoouwkAlaEbNKxCKmxEhyTSfyvZOHHBsUQk43-Sn6K_bFRNiUyMDUmHEYFJ9JGISgnooW17AqI6rTsgxn8X4d0My-XUvlQ/s1600/Matches.jpg&quot; imageanchor=&quot;1&quot; style=&quot;clear:left; float:left;margin-right:1em; margin-bottom:1em&quot;&gt;&lt;img border=&quot;0&quot; height=&quot;400&quot; width=&quot;400&quot; src=&quot;https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgs7I_MuZ9CNhQHuVM8xh-esMD1WXuEsFXj_TiSxubBpC8XvAoouwkAlaEbNKxCKmxEhyTSfyvZOHHBsUQk43-Sn6K_bFRNiUyMDUmHEYFJ9JGISgnooW17AqI6rTsgxn8X4d0My-XUvlQ/s400/Matches.jpg&quot; /&gt;&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/div&gt;



I had bought a house after my divorce. I had promised the kids a puppy, and the weekend we moved in I adopted a rescue and named her Asti. The kids were unsure of her at first but came to love her. She was our &quot;Nanny&quot;. Betty being tiny, only 4 years old asked me for a kitten. It was about the time I was thinking about it, my neighbor came over upset because her husband had threatened to put one of their cats down. &quot;Why?&quot; I asked, &quot;is he sick?&quot; She looked distraught and said, &quot;No, he just doesn&#39;t want him anymore. He&#39;s 4 years old. Please take him for Betty.&quot; Not one to tolerate animal cruelty on any level, I took Matches in. Betty being of the mind she would have a tiny kitten was less than thrilled. &quot;He&#39;s too big and he won&#39;t let me pick him up,&quot; she whined one day. &quot;Just give him time to adjust,he has been through a lot.&quot;
I found out within months after adopting Matches that he had fathered his own sibling, Hercules. Since Hercules was kitten I took him in too, and the cats became a fixture in our house. Matches was the voice of Hercules. He talked more than meowed. He could really only say one word that was recognizable, but we always knew when something was on his mind. When he or Hercules needed anything he would call out through the house, &quot;Hello?&quot; He had perfect inflection. It was remarkable the way he knew how to get our attention.  He guarded me, much like a dog. He was our patriarch, the man of the family. He would survey his kingdom, taking in a any change, keeping a watchful eye on me. When Danny died, I was unable to sleep, and would wander the house, as if I were a ghost, myself. I would not be able to sit down. I was wracked with fear, and Matches would slowly follow behind me until my legs would ache so much I would finally end up on the couch. He would gracefully climb to the back of the couch and stroke my hair, combing through the long strands. He would comb my hair for hours as I lay, eyes open wondering how in the hell we would all survive. When my emotions would bubble up on me, Matches would lay next to my face, nose to nose as I cried. He did the only thing he knew how and the only thing I really needed; he loved me.
With Asti as the animal matriarch, and Matches as the reigning king, our family felt whole in ways I would have never expected.
My lion king has stood watch over me and my family for many, many years. I have never owned pets this long. One of my &quot;adopted&quot; kids said I was running a nursing home for elderly pets. It made me laugh, because it had so much truth to it. It never occurred to me that Matches or Asti or Hercules would live this long. Back when I took them in I figured we would love them for as long as we could without having any idea how long that would be. They got us through the most difficult thing we would face. Even as Matches became weaker, he remained my lion king, showing strength, helping me through his passing. I had thought I would try and keep him home to pass here, but as he faded I realized I had to make the decision I dreaded the most. He never showed pain, but he wasn&#39;t eating, or drinking. I knew what I had to do as my heart was breaking. I bundled up my king and took him to a nearby hospital. I knew in my heart there would be no miracles to save him. He never resisted me picking him up, though he hated being carried. He had always stood on his own four paws, fiercely independent and strong. Cats normally hide when they are ill, but Matches stayed out in the hall, letting us know he still kept watch. He never once stopped being king, even in the final moments of his life. I had said my goodbyes at home, nose to nose with my king as I gave him a list of those who would be waiting for him. I asked him if he were loved enough, and he did something so unusual for him, he licked my hand. My king had my devotion and respect. He had altered me forever, reminding me daily why life is a wonderful, delicate thing.
 I had to make the decision to put him &quot;to sleep&quot;, but he never closed his eyes. With wise, old eyes, he stayed locked on our faces until his last breath. Before I let him go, I told him what a remarkable cat he has been, and that I would love him forever. It is a promise I will keep, because my king deserves nothing less.
This morning, before the break of dawn I was up preparing for my king&#39;s burial. I picked out his spot where he would be laid to rest. I dug feet into the ground tears mixing with drops of sweat until my head was throbbing. I placed my beloved king in his final resting spot and covered my friend until the ground was solid beneath my feet. Two large stepping stones have been placed on top of his grave marking the place where the king now resides.
My lion king was a regal, majestic animal with human qualities. He was compassionate, fair, and strong. My lion king was beautiful to all eyes lucky enough to behold him. He held his place in our family as one who observed and protected. I will never know another cat like my lion king. He was rare and wonderful and singular in his kind. It was my privilege to live with the lion king. He was gracious in his love, and his ability to expand our hearts and minds. Rest in peace, my king. Hearing you purr in your last moments was my own personal heaven right here on earth.</description><link>http://kellieketcham.blogspot.com/2012/07/long-life-of-lion-king.html</link><author>noreply@blogger.com (Kellie Ketcham)</author><media:thumbnail xmlns:media="http://search.yahoo.com/mrss/" url="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgs7I_MuZ9CNhQHuVM8xh-esMD1WXuEsFXj_TiSxubBpC8XvAoouwkAlaEbNKxCKmxEhyTSfyvZOHHBsUQk43-Sn6K_bFRNiUyMDUmHEYFJ9JGISgnooW17AqI6rTsgxn8X4d0My-XUvlQ/s72-c/Matches.jpg" height="72" width="72"/><thr:total>0</thr:total></item></channel></rss>