I Couldn’t Keep Up

Am I overscheduled or just poorly organized?

Photo by Author: Buddy, pooping out twenty yards from home, is about how I feel right now

I optimistically started blogging at the start of the year. But less than three months into my new endeavor, more than one something had to give, and I abandoned my newest activities, both writing and reading other bloggers, as well all social media. I’m still trying to find a way to balance everything, and at this moment, I’m wondering what the hell I was thinking.

“In real life,” I am a CPA/income tax manager, which requires intensely busy workdays and too much overtime for two months each spring and fall. I knew this when I set up my Twitter and Medium accounts and website and started writing. I budgeted my time accordingly, carving out a half hour five days a week, and wrote a few pieces in advance to post throughout the spring so as not to disappear if my plan didn’t work out.


And then life blew up, and even my backup plan didn’t work out.

It is now May 31, a full seven weeks after my work overtime ended, and I’m only just now able to think about writing and reading and interacting again, so I’m trying to figure out whether my inability to stick to my plan this spring will be an anomaly or my expectations were unrealistic.

Work itself was part of it. My firm touts its focus on well-being and work-life balance—admirable goals, and it’s not just lip service. But both have been elusive to many of us simply because there aren’t enough of us. Turnover is high, and those who stay are burning out. Over the last few years, leadership has implemented a grand plan which realigns teams, reassigns workloads, and redesigns or automates some processes and procedures for equity and greater efficiency.

I see the big picture and understand how it should help. But in practice, human beings resist change, and even those who embrace it get confused and fall back on old habits. This spring, complaints mounted, morale suffered, and I found myself holding hands that aren’t mine to hold anymore, taking calls which should have gone to others, and listening to people gripe, which left less time for my own work and caused me longer hours.

Part of this was on me. I like to be approachable and pride myself on great rapport with my colleagues and clients, but I need to set firmer boundaries and more assertively guard my time.


My personal life was a bigger problem, and so much that needed my attention/action felt out of my control.

In early March, my dog Buddy developed an autoimmune disorder (masticatory myositis), and his jaw muscles froze shut. But the standard treatment, heavy doses of prednisone to suppress the inflammation and his immune system, was almost as bad for him as the disease.

I didn’t understand this—when I’m on prednisone, I feel like superwoman! But his muscles atrophied to the point he could barely walk, and he was leaving puddles of urine and diarrhea on the kitchen floor two or three times a night. The vet switched his meds, but we had to wean him off the prednisone way more slowly than we’d have liked, and the new med caused nausea until he got used to it, so he stopped eating and drinking and became so listless I was sure it was the end.

I had to sleep on the couch for several weeks, both because he could no longer climb the stairs up to the bedroom and because he needed to go out so frequently. So, I didn’t sleep much or well, which made work even harder at the apex of peak season since my brain wasn’t functioning on all cylinders. *


During all this, my aunt fell, spent a week in the hospital, and passed away in late March. My uncle, her brother, had a heart attack a few weeks later and is still not out of the woods. These are my dad’s siblings, and he’s been gone for over twenty years, and they are like surrogate parents and my cousins more like siblings, so it’s been tough.


Some good things happened too, but they still required time and energy.

We had two family weddings between March and this week, preceded by two bridal showers. Another aunt turned 75, and we threw her a surprise party, which required a lot of stealth maneuvering to obtain old pictures of her since she is the primary keeper of the family photos. We also expended a lot of mental energy to keep our mouths shut at the afore-mentioned showers and weddings!


Social Security finally approved my brother Dan for disability pay after a two-year fight, and he received a huge lump sum of back pay in February. But because of this, he no longer qualified for the Medicaid that was paying for his health insurance and his nursing home (he’s been in skilled nursing care since being diagnosed with vascular dementia nearly three years ago).

But he also suddenly had enough money to private pay at an assisted living facility for at least a year before he’ll need Medicaid again, and he was convinced he could live on his own again, with a little help. He desperately wanted to live in his own space again rather than a shared hospital room, and I wanted that for him too, but I was concerned he couldn’t handle it (and, frankly, that I would end up needing to do even more for him).

Dan’s primary issue is short-term memory impairment, so learning a new facility, new routines, and new people will take him much longer than it would have before the dementia; his nursing home caretakers were concerned he would be isolated, confused, and depressed, which would hasten his deterioration.

But he’s compensating much better than he did at the beginning, and I felt he deserved a chance at regaining as much independence and privacy as he can handle for as long as he can handle it. So, we had several care conferences and assessments over three months with his nursing home team and the admissions folks at the assisted living facility to determine whether the move was advisable.

We did move him, but he’d lost almost all of his possessions three years ago when he was evicted while in the hospital, so we had to acquire and move all the usual furniture and household items you need to outfit an apartment. He finally settled in two weeks ago. **


And, my daughter, a digital nomad for the last eighteen months, rented an apartment nearby (she had been certain she would eventually land back in her college town, so I credit the dog for her change of heart!). Still in her twenties and unaccustomed to making huge financial commitments on her own, she asked me to help her tour possible places and shop for new furniture (if only we could have seen the future, I could have equipped my brother’s apartment with her cast-offs, but on her last move, she had finally junked the hand-me-downs she’d schlepped across the country several times since college).

She moved into the new place two weeks ago right as we were also moving my brother, and I’ve been going back and forth to both places to help unpack and assemble things.


It’s been a busy spring.

Or am I just making excuses?

I don’t know. But with four months out of the year insane because of work, and personal obligations filling the off-seasons, I’m wondering whether there’s any way I’ll be able to more than dabble in writing until I retire and/or the people and animals I take care of are gone.

If I were a “real writer,” could I make it work no matter what?

Am I not prioritizing or budgeting my time properly?

That feels unfair; I really did have a lot going on. But life is going to continue clamoring for my attention. How do I make time for writing?


Maybe after I recuperate from the recent chaos, I’ll find a helpful perspective.


*Buddy is doing much better now, thank goodness! He’s still weaker and slower than he was three months ago, but he’s finally off the prednisone as of this week, and his spirit is back. He’s playing with toys again, trotting occasionally on his walks, and climbing steps and pulling at the leash without falling over. He’ll be 10 years old soon, and I know he won’t live forever, but we hope he has a few good years left.

Photo by Author: Buddy is loving his walks again!

**My brother Dan is also doing well in his new place! It helped that, in a stroke of fantastic timing, his best buddy since childhood (really more of a sibling to him than I am) was already scheduled off work these past two weeks and has been over several times to hang out with him and help configure his new man cave. They are both thrilled!

Dear Future Me

A letter from my past self arrived

As part of a wellness seminar at work, I wrote a letter to my future self* last year, but then I promptly forgot about it—it was that kind of year—so my letter surprised me right before Christmas. It was so weirdly right on the money, I’m sharing for whatever it tells you about me:

Dear Future Me,

Merry Christmas! You turned 55 this year, which you would have thought ancient even 20 years ago, but which now seems young enough to have a lot of living to do yet, especially compared to your aging relatives and friends (it’s also old enough to make you eligible for some less expensive condos and such in vacation type places you like to visit, so maybe take advantage of that!).


Hopefully, you have maintained your health. You have worked so hard on losing weight and getting more active again in the last 15 months, and you’ve done well. If you’ve fallen off the wagon, well, it happens. Try not to kick yourself. Remember how good you felt after getting healthy, especially in comparison to how bad you were feeling before, and try to re-commit.

Remember how your back hurt when you walked even 10 minutes? How much more would you have been able to see of Arizona and Utah if you didn’t have to limit your walking? How much more fun would the hike to Machu Picchu have been if you could have kept up with the kids (mental note: you might still owe Hubert a house)? Remember how anxious you were to travel on a plane—would the seatbelt even fit? You know you remember. If you did maintain your health, CONGRATULATIONS!! It isn’t easy, and you should be proud. Keep it up!


Your last few years have been difficult personally, trying to make sure Mom and Dan are taken care of without losing your sanity or too much of your own money. If they are still with you and you’re still feeling resentful, give yourself a break and try not to feel guilty. You’re only human, and they are not easy. So also don’t feel bad about doing things for yourself.

If one or both are gone now (even odds at least one is no longer with you), chances are that you aren’t sad and don’t miss them, so again, give yourself a break for that. After all, no one in the family misses them at all now, and they’re still here. It’s a sad situation, but it’s also not your fault. And it’s the big reason you try to be kind to others and live your life differently.


Speaking of that, are you still being a hermit like Dan used to be? People love you, and you love them, so try to get out more. You know you always enjoy time spent with family and friends even when your first impulse is to turn down invitations and stay home. Reach out to them. Everyone knows you are busy and burdened; they don’t judge you and are just glad to see you whenever they can.


Are you dating? HAHAHAHA! I know, right? It’s what everyone always asks when they see you again. If you actually are, make sure he’s worthy. Respect any red flags. And don’t go trying to find flags that truly aren’t there—that’s your baggage. If you are not with anyone, you’re probably perfectly happy anyway, and that’s just fine.


I hope the world opened back up and you were able to take some more fun trips this past year. And I hope you didn’t lose anyone to COVID, which is starting to rage again just when we all felt safe, or to anything else.

Keep taking good care of yourself. If you’ve learned anything as you’ve matured, it’s that life is precious and short. See your beloved friends and family (don’t see the ones that suck the life out of you if you don’t want to, and don’t feel bad about it). Take the trip. Eat the doughnut (just not a half dozen every day!). Be present for it all.

Optimistically,
Your 54-year-old self, December 2021

***

My notes on the contents:

I lost 80 pounds two years ago, and I keep re-gaining and re-losing 20 to 30. But I’ve kept 50 off consistently and still feel pretty good, so I’m proud of that.


Hubert was our guide in Peru, who wouldn’t let me give up even after the twentieth time I told the kids to leave me on the mountain and save themselves and say nice things at my funeral. The photos above are from that hike in 2018.


Indeed, my mother passed away—the day before my birthday. Many people said to me what I said to myself: it was her last birthday gift to me. If you think that sounds awful, well, it does, but as I share my stories, maybe you’ll understand. I took care of her for the last three years of her life, so I’m not an ogre. But she was a narcissist, and the years she didn’t talk to me (because I set a boundary she couldn’t bulldoze) were the most peaceful of my life. And as I’d suspected, I do not miss her, and I’m more sad about that than about her death, so I’m glad I thought to remind myself not to feel guilty. I had grieved her and our relationship a long time ago.**


Dan is my younger brother, who is in a nursing home with alcoholic memory loss, and he is still with us. He’s the father of my adopted dog, Buddy, whom I tried really hard to re-home when Dan was hospitalized and then homeless, but he was apparently meant to be mine. There’s a message in there, I’m sure.


I am not dating. And everyone still asks. Like Buddy, he’ll have to fall in my lap and be pretty damn near perfect and willing to sleep in separate bedrooms and maybe separate houses and maybe go away for a few weeks at a time, and then maybe (MAYBE) I’ll think about it.


I am still more of a hermit than I should be, but I’m trying.


Trip-wise, I was in my hometown a lot this year because I was taking care of Mom and then her estate. I spent a couple months in Florida; several friends, extended family members, and my other brother live there. I’m on my way back tomorrow! Some things are brewing, so we’ll see what 2023 brings.


*If this idea interests you, check out Future Me.


**On this topic of difficult mother-daughter relationships, Jennette McCurdy’s memoir, I’m Glad My Mom Died, is in my TBR pile. A memoir that really spoke to me this year was The Burning Light of Two Stars, by Laura Davis, who also cared for her mother at the end of her life after a long estrangement. I highly recommend this powerful and healing memoir.

Welcome to my blog

Lynn’s logic on illogical behaviors

What do we owe the people in our lives, especially those we are intimately involved with: immediate family, romantic partners, close friends?

Standard answers, at least to me, are trust, loyalty, respect, and acceptance. This includes helping when asked, if possible.

But is what we owe others absolute, or can circumstances change the calculus?

What is unconditional love?

Does “unconditional love” mean loyalty is required when friends and family behave badly? When they hurt us? When they hurt others? Does loyalty require I tolerate ongoing abuse, financially support an addict, condone criminal acts? Must I continue to support a loved one who behaves abominably when I would refuse to begin a relationship with someone new who does the same thing? Or is making such judgments setting conditions on love?

Is a transactional component to our assessments acceptable, i.e., he didn’t help me then, so why should I help him now? Or the reverse, she was there for me through everything so I must support her despite what she did?

My experiences

I envision my blog being about whatever I feel like writing about, but many posts will explore such themes. I have both supported and walked away from loved ones who behaved badly, and I’m currently writing a memoir on my attempt to grapple with my closest (or so I thought) friend’s secret criminal life, exposed when she was arrested and spent two years in prison for a violent felony. If you’re also looking to heal from someone else’s behavior that you just can’t wrap your head around and/or that threatened to take you down too, I hope you’ll find reading worthwhile, and I’ll be interested in your comments and experiences.

I’ve gained so much insight from others’ memoirs about trauma and chaos in their own pasts, as well as from a few self-help books, and I will share those along the way. I would love to hear your own recommendations as well.

Thanks in advance for joining me on this journey.