Archive for April, 2010

Respect

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

I have been thinking a lot about respect lately.  My husband and I had “words” about an issue relating to respect a few nights ago.  We were having dinner with our daughter, as we do every night.  Dinner at our house is important.  In my husband’s childhood, dinner was eaten while watching TV.  The whole family sitting around the table glued to the TV.  No conversations or sharing of news just mindless viewing of someone else’s made up life.  We dont (usually) watch dinner while we eat.  That is something special saved for the weekend.  Instead we share our days and have discussions about current events.  Tuesday night my husband had brought his blackberry to the table  to look something up that he and our daughter were disussing and he received a work email.  And he answered it.  Darby, our daughter made her disapproval known as did I and he blew us off with the “Its work, about tomorrow.  Gotta take care of it.”  Later I tried talking to him about it and he blew me off even more angrily then before.  I thought about it all the next day and told him when he got home from his business trip that if he couldnt disconnect from his job for 30 minutes while we ate dinner then i was not going to go to the trouble and time of making family dinner.  To which he said OK.  And that was end of the discussion.  I was pretty upset.  No more family dinner?  The more I thought about it the less it became about family dinner and the more it became about respect.  Darby and I feel less than when he inserts work into our time with him.   I broached the subject again this morning.  But this time I went at it from the point of view of respect.  I didnt feel he respected our feelings.  I even went so far as to say “We’re bummed when work interferes with our time with you.  Would you prefer we not care whether you are here or not?”  In the end, ironically, he had been short with me because he felt he didnt do it a lot and i wasnt giving him any credit for that.  When I pointed out he actually does do it a lot and reacts angrily when we verbalize our dislike of the interference we had a very productive conversation.  Our conversaton of course revolved around communicaiton.  I think good communication is the key to respect.  We communicated well and we could then respect our mutual positions and will continue a version of family dinner.

Sometimes when I feel disrespected I react angrily or sarcastically which inhibits good communication.  Of course I am feeling angry because in reality I am questioning the validity of my own feelings of respect.  I respected my own and my daughter’s feelings but went into the discussion with the intent of respecting my husband’s feelings about his job as well.  Respecting yourself means standing up for yourself but not at the expense of trodding on someone else’s respect.

Comfort zones

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

I have been continually moving outside my comfort zone for the past few years.  Through my life as a Mom and my life as a creative being I have tried to grow even when it was uncomfortable.   As a Mom that involves giving my 10 year old daughter the privelage of walking part of the way home from school by herself.  We live in suburbia and everyone is bussed or driven to school.  I hear all the time “Oh you’re the  folks who walk to school.”  Such a novelty even though we only live a 1/4 mile from the school.  Even that little decision, filling out the paperwork for her to NOT ride the school bus but instead be a walker was a bit out of my comfort zone.  I was doing something different which can feel uncomfortable.  But I walk my dogs everyday rain, snow or sleet so the idea of walking was not unusual.  And from the beginning it was a good decision.  We talk and establish a better relationship with that extra time together and she has learned time management skills as well.  I don’t think I have started a walking trend at our elementary school but that was never the point.  The point was to do something important to me/us; exercise and teaching independence.

On the creative side I went outside my comfort zone when I decided to write a novel.  I had written short stories and always felt i didnt have it in me to write a whole novel.  I read a book on writing by Stephen King called “On Writing” and he said the beginning writer should write a 1000 words a day.  That gave me a daily goal; an attainable goal and I took the novel writing one day at a time.  and now I have a 80,000 word novel and I am going out of my creative zone repeatedly trying to find an agent for it.  Oh sure, you’re thinking ‘I go out of mycomfort zone once and then look what happens. i have to just keep doing it over and over again!’   But what Ihave found is it gets easier and easier each time.  I dont even think of the replies from agents as rejections.  they are just not interested; not the right fit.  I am a reader.  I love to read but I don’t love everything and so I understand finding the right agent takes time.  Besides they are usually really nice! 

Going out of your comfort zone can be scary but it can also be liberating and exciting and frankly addicting!  So, if there is something you have wanted to try but felt it was outside your comfort zone I say Go For it!  You won’t regret it!