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Category Archives: Personal Development

A Fresh Start: Coming Back From Grief

19 Wednesday Mar 2025

Posted by kathyd65 in Living Life on Life's Terms, Personal Development

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Grief, Healing, Love, Personal experience, Progress, Routine, Self-Love

Photo by Frank Cone

February 26, 2025: Grief is a solitary road, even among family members who lost the same person. Back In December I shared about Depression, Grief and Holidays. Today I’ll share a bit about the process of my grief and the progress I’m making.

In September 2023 I had a morning routine. This routine, supporting my recovery program from alcoholism and addiction, usually started at 6:00 am more or less and included yoga, walking, caring for the cat in my life, connecting with my Higher Power through prayer and meditation, and writing in a journal. Almost every morning for a few years, that’s how I’d start my day. Up before the sun without an alarm, starting my day checking in with myself and my higher power before the rest of the world got moving.

In October 2023 – Wednesday, October 4, to be exact – I woke with that same intention, getting my Self in the right head space. I opened my iPad and what I saw on the screen changed my life and the lives of all my family members forever.

Long story short: my sister had taken her life the night before.

What followed was a jumble of numbness and emotions so confusing and intense that I retreated to a place inside that I didn’t know was still even an option. I found a compartment to place all the conflicting thoughts and feelings until I could sit alone and begin to look at them. Forty-eight hours later I was finally able to peek in the box.

I also no longer had a morning routine, nor did I care that I had no mooring.

What’s it like to experience this type of grief? It’s lonely. It’s maddening. And it takes as long as it takes to work through it to become the person I want to be today. That’s about as precise as I can be for the thousands of people who experience this type of grief every year. (more than 49,300 suicide deaths occured in the United States alone in 2023, according to provisional data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

When my sister Faith took her life, she also took a part of mine. I experienced depression, rage and even had suicidal thoughts of my own. I wanted to escape the emotional pain of the loss. The pain was deep and it affected every aspect of my life for months. I stopped showering regularly, instead living in the same tshirts and sweatpants for days, which resulted in two UTIs. I had no appetite for days in a row, then I ate everything comforting I could get my hands on for a day. That cycle repeated.

I still attended my weekly recovery meetings and I shared in a general way how I was feeling and what I was going through. I also sought out others I might be able to speak with about our shared grief, others who had lost loved ones, particularly siblings, to suicide. I felt more alone, not being able to find a sibling group during that first year. I tried some message board pages where you type out your feelings, but that felt flat, like I wasn’t being heard. I wrote a poem to her, about her. I did my best to be available to my father and to her daughters, my nieces, but it was hard going.

As the months passed, I became concerned for my spiritual well being. I didn’t feel like I was angry at my Creator but I also wasn’t that interested in reaching out in prayer or meditation. I no longer journaled regularly. I didn’t practice yoga or walk anymore.

I felt lost in a way that only a person who’s lost another person close to them would understand.

I found a book titled It’s Okay That You’re Not Okay by Megan Devine and it took me months to get through that book, but it helped. I read it when I could, when I was ready.

My father, who was also deeply affected by my sister’s passing, shared a series of pamphlets – almost like books – shortly after she passed, sending a new one at three months, and again at six months (maybe nine months?). Like the book I’d bought, I read the pamphlets when I was ready – which is to say, when I was able to force myself to read them in order to regain some peace I had lost.

See, before my sister ended her life, it only happened in other people’s families, not mine. Yes, our family has it’s fair share of mental illness history – trauma, violence, alcoholism, verbal and physical abuse – but each of us found a way to heal from it, or so I thought. But when she died, it became very real and very possible for anyone in my family to do this. There was a hyper-vigilence in those first few months of watching every member of the family very closely, making sure everyone else was getting the help they needed so this wouldn’t happen again.

March 18, 2025: It’s been almost eighteen months since my sister died. Most days I feel much like my old self. I started praying and meditating more regularly about a month ago. I’ve tried yoga a handful of times in the past couple of weeks. I’m journaling more, not every day, but more than once a month. I started a daily walk three days ago.

Small steps. A little at a time. Because even though on most days I feel better, I don’t always feel better. Today, for example, I felt derailed. Not necessarily grief driven, just saying that without the grief some days have always been hard.

Every day I have an opportunity to make a fresh start. I can DO or NOT DO. I get to decide what a fresh start looks like for me and set an intention to do that. I didn’t want to walk today – I recognized all the excuses I use to avoid a walk: It’s too cold, it’s too windy, it’s too late in the day, I don’t want to. I reminded myself why I walk – first, I like walking. I also want to use my muscles and joints so they don’t rebel on me later in life. I get to hear the birds chirping and the wind rustling through the trees. I get to wave at the neighbors and their pets while they are out walking. And I feel really good, physically and emotionally, when I finish my walk. Same with my meditation, and my morning tea.

I wrote this piece a few weeks ago. It sat for a while because it needed to, I needed to. I wasn’t sure what I was trying to share. Having re-read it, and adding today’s few paragraphs, I am reassuring myself that I am right where I need to be in the process of grieving and growing. It’s only been 18 months. When I believe that the feelings around her death are behind me, I might be unpleasently surprised when I am hit with the wave of grief again.

On the other hand, unexpected reminders of my sister Faith also bring me joy. Sunday, it was the hummingbird that visited me on the patio. Yesterday it was a Dave Matthews song she loved that brought a smile to my heart.

Healing is happening on it’s very own timetable. My fresh start is in progress right now.

Zero to “F#!k You” in 5 Seconds

30 Thursday Jan 2025

Posted by kathyd65 in Life Lessons, Living Life on Life's Terms, Personal Development

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It’s a long story and I’ll do my best to make it shorter – but if you know me, or have read my stuff, you know you’re in for a tale.

We (I) wanted a new dining room table. It would be my first. Not a hand-me-down. Not one owned by him before we got married (which wouldn’t happen anyway; he only had a coffee table). We were hosting Thanksgiving at my home for sixteen family members. SIXTEEN!

I asked husband what he wanted in a dining room table – his DREAM table. He replied that he’d like a rectangle shape, nor rounded corners. Pedestal legs, not corner legs. And an extension leaf in the middle, so we could make it longer or shorter. Oh, and he wanted a minimum of 7 feet in length. I wanted cushioned chairs. We searched the internet and actually found one that we liked. We went to the furniture store to purchase said table. We wanted to see the showroom model, but they didn’t have the space to show every piece in their catalog. Okay, we said.

We pay. We set a delivery date. We wait. I didn’t read the fine print.

The table arrives on October 30. The delivery team is polite, friendly, and seem to do a fine job in setting up the table. They ask, would we like them to install the extension leaf or leave it out. At the time, we thought nothing of the question, as it was our first NEW dining room table delivery. We looked it over when they were done. It looked lovely, sitting there in the space we’d made. I imagined our family around the table in a few weeks, enjoying a meal together. All my children would be under the same roof for the first time in seventeen years!

Having given the delivery team the okay to leave, and a generous tip, they departed. I dusted off the table and sat in one of those cushy chairs to admire it. That’s when I saw it. There was a HUGE dent the extension leaf. WTF!

We immediately contacted the furniture store, who redirected us to claims, and a replacement table was scheduled for a week before Thankgiving.

Here’s where the real fun began, and how I lost my shit on a customer service rep.

The second table delivered came with a warped extension leaf and one of the table-top surfaces was not finished. The delivery team said they’d enter a claim immediately, and left. I contacted the store again, to make my complaint known. An assessment technician appointment was scheduled so another person from the store could confirm our new claim. After that tech came to visit, confirmed our claim, took photos and spoke to his supervisor, he assured us that the claim was valid and that we’d receive a new table.

Following that meeting, we received some very frustrating communications from the call center, first to send another technician out to confirm what the first technician confirmed, then to schedule a delivery instead.

We scheduled the table delivery for three separate occasions, each canceled because: 1) they didn’t recieve a replacement table in time for delivery (Dec. 23), 2) the table they did receive was damaged and could not be delivered (Dec. 30), and 3) the table they were going to deliver was damaged by the delivery team as they were loading it onto the truck. That was on January 16.

On January 15, I received an email confirming our delivery. On January 16, I received a text message from the delivery team at 7:30 am telling me they were on their way. It was almost too good to be true. I felt a glimmer of hope that this ordeal (which it felt like) was almost over. And then, at 8:30 am, I got a call from another call center person telling me that the table was damaged while being loaded onto the truck. Yeah. I lost it. My composure, my finesse, my kindness. I yelled, I swore, I ranted about all the issues since the first delivery. He offered to reschedule a delivery and I hung up on him. Not my best moment. But wait, it gets worse before it gets better.

Realizing my error, I called the customer care number back, and when another call center person answered, and asked how they could help me, I launched my tirade onto them. I hadn’t cooled down nearly enough to attempt a reasonable conversation with them. And they hung up on me. Ugh.

Third time is a charm, they say. And it was. I did some deep breathing. I reminded myself of the person I wish to be in all situations. Calm, reasonable, not a doormat, and not an asshole. I was calm, I stuck to the facts, and the call center person filed ANOTHER claim and told me that someone would contact me for a rescheduled delivery in a couple of days.

The reschedule request came in the form of an email. I scheduled the delivery electronically. And I let all that shit go. I relayed all that transpired to husband and laughed at myself, at the absurdity of my behavior. It’s a fucking table. Was I frustrated about the number of delays? Yes. The incompetence of the delivery teams? Hell, yes. Was all of that out of my control? Obviously.

Yesterday the newest table was delivered. There is a blemish in the tabletop, a stain, as if a drop of the wood sealer wasn’t wiped clean in time. And the extension leaf is flush with the table (yay) and yet there is a small gap between one corner of the extension leaf and the table. I conceeded to the Universe and I accepted the table as it is. Because it’s just a fucking table. A lesson. An object that reminds me how little control I really have over everything by my response. A reminder that I get to choose who I want to be in this world, that I get to pick my battles. This battle is over.

I will be meeting with the store manager though.

Thanks for reading.

More Old Musings

08 Friday Mar 2024

Posted by kathyd65 in Personal Development

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I’ve had another awakening recently and I wanted to share it with you. I didn’t know how to word it though – and then I interacted with a friend via text, about our journeys so far and I think what I told him may be the way I wish to express it to you all:

“You say many things I can relate to as well. I am learning more every day, about me, and about the beliefs I constructed about myself based upon societal norms, upbringing, shame and circumstance. Just this week I realized that I had created the story I chose to operate by and that the story no longer serves me, who I wish to be. I get to dismantle that story, those self-imposed beliefs and re-write my story with more truth and transparency, with more vulnerability and humility. I also realize based on this experience that my story will continue to evolve, become cleaner, clearer, more true, simpler, as long as I continue to practice self-awareness, slow down, and be present.”

So – I’ve been unraveling about 40 years of … construction, conditioning … the creation, the evolution of present day Kathy. It’s been an interesting and somewhat painful, ego-deflating process.

Over the past weekend I attended a 3-day business conference of the most unique nature and I was presented with the opportunity to own all my misery. By that I mean this: I am 54 years old, and most of my coping skills were developed and locked in by the time I was 25 or so (maybe). I lived a life of avoidance and would not see who I was. I blamed anyone and everyone for the way my life unfolded. Until very recently I did not believe that the way I operated life looked like that.

During a phone call Monday, I had a spiritual experience: BOOM!! Like that, I suddenly saw that the self-doubt voice in my head was created by me and in that realization I discovered I could dismantle that which I created. I could say No when I felt No, I could use my voice and stand up for myself and others, and I no longer need the coping skills of avoidance and blame to live my life.

Now – I also realize that I used those skills for a long time and I may slip back on occasion. I will do my best – today’s best – to remain present, ask myself questions to challenge my personal beliefs and stay true to continuing to let go of that which does not serve me or my fellows. More will be revealed.

November 16, 2019

More Will Be Revealed, and more, and more

01 Friday Mar 2024

Posted by kathyd65 in Personal Development

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“I imagine one of the reasons people cling to their hates so stubbornly is because they sense, once hate is gone, they will be forced to deal with pain.” – James A. Baldwin

Earl H. (newly sober alcoholic at a meeting): “A man walks up to me and says, ‘Hi Earl, how ya doin’?’ Being newly sober I have NO IDEA how I’m doing. His question frightens me. I cannot say ‘That question frightens me.’ I only know that now I am scared and that man scared me. Therefore, I hate that man.” (Paraphrased from a speaker tape)

44 years ago a pivotal event occurred in my life. I was 9. I was frightened and I did not have the tools or the caretaker capable of helping me navigate the event to a healthy outcome. My fear morphed into anger, which eventually festered into a lifelong resentment. I trusted no one, not really. I learned a set of rules to survive, to cope and played a game – show them what they want to see, please everybody. Do not show them the true me. Do not oppose. Do not cry. Do not get angry. Do not disagree. And also, do not show fear. Do not let them know they got to me. Do not let them hurt me. I played that game for so long I forgot I was playing it. It became my new reality and Me got lost. 20 years of drug and alcohol abuse to first relieve and then to hide from the resentment. 15 years of sobriety, addiction recovery, therapists, workshops, writing – digging deep, healing… little did I know that I was preparing for the big reveal.

This past year I’ve read more personal development books, attended more seminars, and done more writing, truth seeking, uncovering and facing than I have in the previous 14 years. I became so willing to move forward through unseen forces that I have allowed to hold me in place my whole life that my healing was accelerated tenfold.

Uncovering old hurts, facing them, working through them and letting them go, has allowed me to put them in their correct light.

February 1, 2019

Lego Life Lesson Reminders

09 Tuesday Apr 2019

Posted by kathyd65 in Best Life, Better Version of Me, Life Lessons, Personal Development, Transition, Truth Mostly

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Tags

Life, Magic, Personal experience, truth

Lego Life Lesson Reminders

Building Lego kits reminds me of life lessons… I thought I’d share that with you today.

2019-04-09 10.20.32My husband bought me a Lego Creator kit for a 1967 Mustang. This kit has over 1,400 bricks and pieces, and the completed model will be 13.5 inches long and 5.5 inches wide. The instruction manual has 195 pages for the basic design and about 20 more pages to the super charger engine. Challenging, right?

Have you ever put together Legos? Kits, I mean, although, there is something rather meditative about building something from your imagination using Lego bricks.

Lego kits come with instructions and all the bricks you need to build whatever is pictured on the box.

Here’s how it works. Each page  in the instruction booklet features:

  1. a diagram of the pieces you need to build the sequence on that page.
  2. step by step diagram of how to put those pieces together.
  3. diagram to show you where to put that bit you just built.

Legos provides step by step instructions, and building a Lego offers you an opportunity to be present. I cannot think of or focus on anything else while I am putting together Legos. I am required to stay in the present moment in order to build the kit properly.

Master Creators create Legos beginning with the end in mind. Actually, I think Legos may come up with the end result IDEA first (“Wouldn’t a Millenium Falcon be a cool Lego kit? I wonder how we could do that?”, said some Master Creator somewhere) and then deconstructs the idea (go backwards and creates a series of steps) so that they – the Master Builders – can create a kit with all the pieces to build something amazing.

I applied this deconstruction (start at the end and go backwards) technique on purpose just recently – even though I’ve been using it unconsciously for most of my life.

In the beginning of this post I mentioned that Legos provides an instruction manual (sometimes with over 200 pages). I also recall hearing again and again over the years about how LIFE does not come with an instruction manual. Nor does parenting (although there are hundreds of books on both subjects these days… but they are pretty general and each of us is pretty unique).

Except that maybe life DOES come with instruction manuals. You probably have a set of instructions you’ve developed for many of your daily activities, although you may not realize it. Everything we do during the day requires a series of steps. Let’s use taking a shower as an example – what goes into that? Well, the water has to be running, right? Shampoo, Conditioner, and soap are typically involved – what order you use those in is up to you. Wash cloth or no wash cloth (some folks use those plastic scrubbies). You’ll need a towel within reach to dry off. Do you take clothes into the bathroom with you to get into after you dry off? Think about your bathing process. That’s a series of steps.

Getting the kids ready for school? You probably repeatedly do the same thing each morning to get from waking up to getting out the door.

Brushing your teeth. Doing the dishes. Making a meal.

Step by step. A series of processes. You have created a bunch of mental instruction manuals.

When the goal or desire is bigger, or you want to achieve something on purpose, that process may seem overwhelming, or unclear. How then could you apply the instruction manual, or deconstruction technique, to the bigger things in life? The things you desire? Better job, bigger house, that European vacation (I assume everyone wants one of those).

I used the deconstruction for a dream of mine: the end result or desire – a bigger house. How do I get there? I broke it down, I started at the end and went backwards – probably just like the Lego Master Builders. To move into a bigger house, I need to move out of this littler house and I’d like to rent this one rather than sell it. This littler house is not ready to be rented as it is, so I need to improve a couple of things – kitchen, driveway. I also need to qualify for a loan for that bigger house, and be able to pay the mortgage. I’ll need money for both of those things – to fix little house, to pay for bigger house. I have a little income, but I’ll need more, so I need a side hustle. Going backwards, and WRITING IT DOWN, helps me to SEE the process to get where I want to go, and to help me stay on track as I head there – because life will present challenges and try to knock me off track. A written plan will keep me moving forward.

I wrote an instruction manual to get a house.

You can do the same thing to get a job, buy a car, improve a relationship, get into better shape, be a better parent, finish college, or what ever it is that you desire. Step by step, you build upon the foundation of your desire until you get to the end. And you can do this over and over again.

That’s what Legos reminded me about today. I can write my own instruction booklet for every desire I have, big and small. And if I follow the steps, I will reach my goals.

For now though, I’m going to go work on that Mustang!

Recent Posts

  • A Fresh Start: Coming Back From Grief March 19, 2025
  • Being Yourself Encouraged (but not really). February 19, 2025
  • Whoop De Doos in the California Desert February 12, 2025
  • Every New Moment, First Time Ever February 5, 2025
  • Zero to “F#!k You” in 5 Seconds January 30, 2025

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Road Unknown

A Memoir of the Road Unknown

One Chance to See the World

Insta @onechancetoseetheworld

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Tales from the mouth of a wolf

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I am more of a story teller than anything and, I will throw in and sprinkle some motivational personal experiences.... & Every Little Thing.

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If you want to be a hero well just follow me

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The short fiction of j hardy carroll

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Novelist, Poet, Wordsmith

Once uPUN a time...

Finding novel ways of engaging students and exploring content.

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Listen to your inner self..it has all the answers..

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