Posts Tagged ‘Facebook’

 

My Voice

Tuesday, April 5th, 2011

I have been working on several blog posts lately, working and reworking but never quite completing them. It wasn’t difficult before … before people actually read my blog or before they de-friended me on Facebook or just de-friended me in general.

And then I read http://networkedblogs.com/enz7C by Cath Duncan and pulled out this line:
“Grief needs to be expressed in some way – either privately or with witnesses, in order to heal.”

I grew up in an environment of repression and hidden secrets, a home where sweeping was obligatory and the carpet was lumpy with unexpressed emotion. Food was always the blanket that smothered the fire. And I married a man who held the same sentiment … for the obvious reason that that was my comfort zone. But as I evolved into the free-spirited writer, traveler and mother my perspective changed.

I became isolated and part of my means to break through to the other side involved sending out these messages into the ether – I didn’t know where they were going, I just wrote and posted and in a sense that was the release my issues needed … a public airing with seemingly no consequences and no obvious recourse that usually comes with discussing things face-to-face with someone who could quite easily instantly judge me.

The more isolated I became, the more I worked on finding my voice and in the midst of paradox, my blog was born, anonymous at first … and then not so. I broke free from fear of embarrassment and in a sense I embraced the inevitable judgement, fearless of the repercussions that would come from my admission that the thought of throwing my baby against the wall crossed my mind … and more than just the one time.

You ask what place grief has on a baby blog? I believe that every time you walk through the fire of transformation, be it willingly or at the hand of the universe, there is a fair amount of healthy grieving that needs to be done in order to heal. Not everything can be fixed with a roast chicken and a chocolate bar. When I got married I had to grieve my singledom. When I had my child, I had to grieve the life I had lost to motherhood. Sure, many women continue as they were, employ nannies or harness the help of family and friends to support their existing lives. But I had changed too much. And when I left my husband, I had to grieve … well, I had to grieve and grieve and grieve for all that was lost.

I remember blurting out how crap it was that I had fallen pregnant, only to fall prey to a barrage of criticism for my insensitivity considering one of the women in the group had been suffering with fertility problems. “But I didn’t know!” I claimed. It didn’t help. Another friend had a miscarriage and told no one so issues to do with abortions, for example, became a taboo subject … impossible if you were not part of her closely guarded secret. I have noticed on so many occasions how easily people have judged me for getting divorced … until I realized it’s not so much the doing as it is the telling. The telling exposes people’s vulnerability around issues. The telling makes them take a closer look at their own fragile situation. And in my case, for 14 years my marriage was perceived as a union of the perfect couple and if such a tragedy could befall the prom royalty, then what chance did others have when their relationships were far more ‘of this world’.

I have had to deal with therapy sessions that paint me as a tough piece of work who is terrified of displaying any vulnerability, hence creating a host of relationship issues around neediness. I took that on and practiced really hard to be vulnerable … when all along my blog is the very proof that I wear my vulnerability on my sleeve and the fact that it doesn’t line up with how my partner is needed has little bearing.

But I digress in my explanation. My laptop screen is littered with a variety of Text and Word documents, all posts waiting to be born but, ironically, as my healing begins to feel like it is close to completion, I struggle to deal with my audience. I lost my voice for months and it only returned recently. The posts on my blog were written by a woman who now forms only a part of me and the fate of the unfinished documents scattered over my desktop lie sealed by the hand of their author who no longer exists.

My life as an open book

Monday, June 28th, 2010

You get people who brush things under the carpet. And then you get me. I lift the carpet. And then I search. With a flashlight. And I broadcast what I find.

I blogged about my travels. I put it all out there for everyone to read. People could read with horror or wonder and know what I was experiencing almost daily. And when I came back, I didn’t have to try and pack into a single conversation the enormity of the experience of travelling through India with a 4-year-old. Everyone just knew and asked for only a little information to fill the gaps in the story. A cultivated result.

But we tend not to do that with other life-changing experiences. We tuck things away and in the face of an enormous experience such as two great people parting ways, we have to explain how we got to this place without anyone noticing.

People were shocked when they heard my marriage was breaking up. It took them by surprise and I have been explaining for months what should have been out in the open for years. When you get to a point of needing support, it is useful when people know what you need the support for instead of having to bring your nearest and dearest up to speed. I had left a trail of crumbs on Facebook … a trail that didn’t lead me back home but rather straight into the witch’s house. My Facebook page became a forum for all the people who themselves had been tucking things away. Is my midlife crisis merely a sign of these new sandwich years – a generation stuck between a parenting style of shame, guilt and denial and a new enlightened age of gentleness and introspection? I haven’t seen the driver. Regardless, life’s experiences need to be shared. Not only do we learn from our own experiences but we also have an opportunity to teach. We don’t – and can’t – live in a vacuum.

“If you share with others, they will share with you”, I keep telling my son. And that kinda means I have to do the same … only this sharing thing just got a lot more grown up.

Facebook Friends

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

I had friends … you might call them acquaintances … in London, who have moved back to South Africa, had children, and totally dropped under the radar. I know it is normal to change friends when you have a child … after all you have a new identity and you need to be comfortable with that new identity without feeling like a total fraud because you have become a totally different person. Then there are the friends you have that are even better friends for the very same reason.

And then there are the Facebook friends … the people you once knew but who have now become their children – even on Facebook. I battle to get even a glimpse into the lives of people I haven’t seen in years because they have placed themselves behind their new personas as parents. There is the tricky issue of new last names … an argument I won’t get into as I kinda get the deal even though I am totally anti the idea myself … and the fact they use pictures of their children for their profile pictures. And all they ever discuss are things to do with theirs or other’s children and child-related things.

It’s fine to be proud of your children – obviously I realise that – but surely you lose yourself if you never let yourself see the light of virtual day. Somewhere behind the parent lurks the free-spirited singleton … surely!

Perhaps it is my own character that is flawed in thinking that no one could possibly be that attached to parenthood to want to become someone else in order to fulfil a stereotypical role. But is it too much to ask to just have my friends back the way they were even when I know they will never be the same again …?

SURVEY 2008

Friday, November 7th, 2008

A survey goes around the email circuit annually and it’s intended purely as a bit of fun to pass on to your friends with your own custom-made answers to give a little insight into what’s going on with you in this age of technology when the only way to communicate is through email, Facebook, MySpace, feedalizr and Twitter (etc., etc.). I sent it to everyone and got zero response from any of my friends who I don’t seem to even see any more due to the demands of life and the cost of fuel. Seems like the cost of living has forced the stakes even higher and compounded the problems of social networking technologies.

It could be identity theft, as a family member exclaimed, and it could be resource theft, designed to waste employees’ time and efforts. It may be my longest post ever but I say it’s important to find a bit of space in a busy day to have a bit of fun. It is too easy to try and prove that we are too busy to do these things – wow, what would people think if I sent this to them and they realised I had an hour in my day for total frivolity? Eish, don’t take life so seriously …

  1. What time did you get up this morning?
  2. 7:30! It’s a miracle (not that I believe in those …) that my child woke up so late so, for that, I am thankful.

  3. Diamonds or pearls?
  4. Pearls make me feel old so I guess diamonds will have to do.

  5. What was the last film you saw at the cinema?
  6. Wall-E – may have something to do with my environmental posts …

  7. What is your favourite TV show?
  8. Weeds currently but will always go back to Sex and the City and it irks me that they sold out to Hollywood.

  9. What do you usually have for breakfast?
  10. What’s that?

  11. What is your middle name?
  12. Should have been Jan

  13. What food do you dislike?
  14. Well, I was once served a bowl of soup in China – it was filled with an animal’s intestines. I disliked that! But, more generally speaking, brussels sprouts, aubergines, meat.

  15. What is your favourite CD at moment?
  16. Can I have two? David Jordan and Asha

  17. What kind of car do you drive?
  18. Beetle (LHD from Holland) … ten years old – it’s the love of my life and I would only replace it for a Beetle, circa 1970 … or the next fabulous hybrid if I manage to get the thing referred to in 52 below.

  19. Favourite sandwich?
  20. Crayfish and Rocket from Pret is still my favourite and cannot be replaced as such – EVER!

  21. What characteristic do you despise?
  22. Smugness

  23. Favourite item of clothing?
  24. Leopard print faux fur micro mini – with lace up knee-high boots. But when I’m feeling more generic … Earl Jeans and Hello Kitty t-shirt.

  25. If you could go anywhere?
  26. Anywhere!

  27. Favourite brand of clothing?
  28. Local is lekker – Joe Soap et al … but I crave a bit of High Street in the form of H&M, Whistles, Calvin Klein and Karen Millen. Anything else is out of my league and not even worth mentioning.

  29. Where would you retire to?
  30. It depends how old I am when I retire. In an ideal world, somewhere in the Med. but I have a feeling retirement will come with a yacht or a motorhome.

  31. What was your most recent memorable birthday?
  32. Definitely my 30th at the Astoria in St Petersburg, overlooking the dome of St Isaacs Cathedral. An operatic ballet (yes, I was also confused) followed by Beluga and Vodka.

  33. Favourite sport to watch?
  34. International rugby … but only if we win; limited-overs cricket; anything at Olympics time, especially winter Olympics.

  35. Farthermost place you are sending this?
  36. I never was very good at geography …

  37. Person you expect to send it back first?
  38. No one – this is spam to almost everyone I know.

  39. When is your birthday?
  40. I’m a Gemini.

  41. Are you a morning person or a night person?
  42. Mornings are a blur and so are the nights for that matter. I will be a night person again but I will never become a morning person.

  43. What is your shoe size?
  44. As long as the shoe fits … does it really matter?

  45. Pets?
  46. Well, most people think I have a ridgeback … but he’s actually my first-born.

  47. Any new and exciting news you’d like to share?
  48. My ridgeback (aka first-born) is going to be a daddy! My child has asked for a baby now that my husband has had the snip. I’m going on a poetry retreat next weekend. I’m running my first half-marathon in 4 years on 12 October.

  49. What did you want to be when you were little?
  50. I’m still little. And I still don’t know.

  51. How are you today?
  52. Fabulous after a shot of cortisone last night. So good in fact that we went for a picnic on the beach and had front row seats to a display of about a dozen whales no more than 50 meters from shore. Followed by a coffee at Olympia and a nap and now washing down gorgonzola on toast with a glass of my favourite chardonnay … well, the only way to make it better would be to be packing for Cambodia.

  53. What is your favourite candy?
  54. White Rabbit toffees.

  55. What is your favourite flower?
  56. Watsonias – in the garden, not a vase.

  57. What is a day on the calendar you are looking forward to?
  58. 13 October (see 24 above!)

  59. What is your full name?

  60. Lady Penelope

  61. What are you listening to right now?
  62. The fluttering of the gas fire – but only with one ear as the other is full of puss.

  63. What was the last thing you ate?
  64. See 26 above.

  65. Do you wish on stars?
  66. I used to when I lived in London and the stars were rarely seen but in Hout Bay the sky looks like someone has spilt the silver glitter so I wouldn’t know where to begin.

  67. If you were a crayon, what colour would you be?
  68. Red, unless it’s an orange-red crayon – then I would have to choose electric blue.

  69. How is the weather right now?
  70. Tired of caring about the weather – it should be spring and … well, it’s not.

  71. The first person you spoke to on the phone today?
  72. I’m not even sure where the phone is today.

  73. What is you favourite soft drink?
  74. Soft? Does beer count?

  75. Favourite restaurant?
  76. Well, there is a hole-in-the-wall noodle bar in Xi’an, China, opposite the Xi’an Royal Hotel … but that was a lifetime ago. Minatos for sushi – it’s owned by the Japanese guy who did the ‘Where Dougras Gleen?’ advertising campaign. More upmarket: The Showroom for real celebrity chef showmanship. Then, of course, the Davidoff at the St Petersburg Astoria – it’s hard to get that one out of one’s head.

  77. Real hair colour?
  78. Hmm, blonde, bordering on a mousey winter brown.

  79. What was your favourite toy as a child?
  80. Mud.

  81. Summer or winter?
  82. Summer in Cape Town; winter in New York.

  83. Hugs or kisses?
  84. Depends from whom.

  85. Chocolate or Vanilla?
  86. Chocolate usually but then I can’t get out of my head a bowl of ice-cream made with real vanilla which I poured Illy espresso over.

  87. Coffee or tea?
  88. Tea … unless Illy is on offer.

  89. Do you want your friends to email you back?
  90. Duh!

  91. When was the last time you cried?
  92. Depends whether in desperation, sorrow, pain or frustration … I think the last time was when my child told me that I had broken the whole of his heart – it was tears without crying so does that count?

  93. What is under your bed?
  94. A built in storage box containing: snorkels, flippers and goggles from Australian campervan trip (will I ever use them again?), towels, bedlinen, clothes I will never wear again (I hope!), dust, lint.

  95. What are you afraid of?
  96. War and public speaking.

  97. Salty or sweet?
  98. Sweet seems like the obvious answer, but nothing beats a chunk of fresh white bread with a slice of butter and a layer of crystal salt. Oh yes, can’t forget the popcorn cooked in salt and then smothered in it too.

  99. How many keys on your key ring?
  100. One.

  101. How many years at your current job?
  102. Job?

  103. Favourite day of the week?
  104. Wednesday – just the morning – as it is the only time of the week that I can be at home totally alone to write.

  105. How many towns have you lived in?
  106. Depends how you define ‘lived in’ – but, I suppose, only 3 (Durban, Cape Town and London).

  107. Do you make friends easily?
  108. I must do as Mike regularly refers to ‘the strays’.

  109. How many people will you send this to?
  110. Definitely one but perhaps more if I can figure out how to get this past their spam filters.

  111. How many will respond?
  112. I doubt anyone will even read it.