Entries Tagged 'Friends' ↓

On moving on up

Instead of completing the {w}rite of passage challenge for today, a bit of a brain dump, because the past week has been a hefty one – a lot of it spent in my head. You could say that I need to get out of it. For scribblings much less disjointed than mine, please seek out other participants’ blogs.

In 20 days, we’re moving. If you didn’t see the tweets on Twitter, then you don’t know what I’m talking about, but nonetheless, I had to make a tough decision – do we stay or do we go, despite how it might affect us financially.

Our current apartment, as you may have heard me bitch about 4000 times, is less than 400 square feet. I know there’s some of you with living rooms that size, but that is our bedroom, bathroom, kitchen and living room. We pay a cheap rent for the area we live in, about 40% of my take-home, and that’s been my main reason for living in such a small space – the neighbourhood and price, and amenities made it worth it.

Today, I told my landlord that we’d would be moving out.

We’re taking the vacant apartment one floor up.

For the low, low price of $500 in security deposit that I’ll be post-dating cheques to cover until the middle of next month; almost $200 more in rent, every month; moving and cleaning both apartments in the same day; and dragging Zoë up and down stairs while her dad helps move the big stuff, we’ll get something we haven’t had in a year and a half, if ever since there’s been a we:

Room to breathe.

It’s easily 200 square feet larger, and the layout of it will provide much more storage and mobility, even if the space didn’t. Like, imagine a closet in the bedroom large enough to fit both of our (admittedly small) wardrobes. Imagine a kitchen large enough for us to both be in, without risk of one or both getting burned, cut or stepped on. Or a bathroom with only two kinds of tiles in it – neither of which contain visible mold.

But the single selling factor was the counter tops in the kitchen. They’re not beautiful. But there is a lot of them.

Right now, we have one surface that is ensconced in yellow 60s tile and approximately the size of a dish drainer. That’s boxed in by the fridge and sink. And on the other side of the sink there’s another counter space – the same size, with the same dreadful tiling, and with moulding grout, for extra fun – and then the stove. All in all, I have a single, skinny person’s prep area, as long as I’m not doing anything that requires working on a flat surface.

The new place? Has twice the counter space and none of it’s boxed in, and there’s a little cutout looking into the living room with a counter top on it, too – a serving window, if you will.

Zoë and I will be able to prepare food together, to roll out doughs and toss things in the blender, and to go back to our old habit of her sitting on the counter, stirring the cookie mix while I washed out the measuring cups.

That’s Utopic, to me.

***

I’ve come full spectrum and drank the Koolaid. Zoë will be unschooled.

Whether it’s at home with me, or full-time in an alternative school hiding under the guise of home-schooling, or half and half, hasn’t been determined, yet, but I can’t deny the overwhelming voice in my head, telling me that she is exactly the sort of child who would benefit most from being given the opportunity to decide her own studies.

Her dad doesn’t agree – thinks she’ll miss out on socialization and that “normal environments” are what it will take for her to be successful in the world – but the thing of it is: he hasn’t done any research. He didn’t finish high school, just like I didn’t – was uninterested in it, even though he loves to learn new things and is extremely well-read. And because he doesn’t have the formal “normal” education, though pursuing his dreams, career-wise, were impossible.

He’s basing his opinion exclusively on exactly the status quo kind of thinking that I don’t really subscribe to, and that I would love for Zoë to question as well.

That’s not to say that I want her to be like me, always wondering what the crack in the surface really indicates. I want her to look at something, and look for alternative realities, to embrace her inherent creativity and wishes to learn things on her own, and then to make an informed decision and share her opinions.

I might have wavered, a few weeks ago, picturing France and how it would only be, like, a half-year that she would be immersed into the regular school system. But then I saw something: the school board here in Vancouver has a semi-unpublicized, hard-to-attain alternative program for high-schoolers: mini-schools. They’re for kids who show particular aptitude in certain areas, so they get self-focused studies, sometimes with advanced graduation and credentials for university admission.

The programs? Sciences, tech and sports. I guess the other stuff isn’t that useful, eh?

Next fall, instead of preschool – with the same curriculum as this year – Zoë will likely be home with me, deciding her future a day at a time. Thinking, ‘Man, I want to know about dogs, I really like doggies,‘ and visiting the SPCA, then looking up the traits of certain breeds and their histories, and going to dog showings and borrowing one of the thousands of canines in this neighbourhood to walk. For example.

She’ll have the opportunity to become as well-versed as she wants, about anything she wants, and because of that – because I’ll trust her to be seeking out something that makes her happy; because learning is everywhere and can be joyous, even – she’ll grow more confident in herself and really love picking up books or picking things apart or creating new paradigms of her own.

To me, unschooling is the difference between asking your kid if they did their homework, and then having to force them to if they were uninterested, and your kid being interested all the time.

Rumour has it, unschooled kids tend to be more helpful around the house, too. Bonus.

***

I made another difficult decision about little while ago, but sat on it. Today, I stopped sitting.

I want to clarify something, as a just-in-case. If you consider us friends – and I do consider us friends if we’ve met or conversed or hugged or been there for one-another or you’ve been there for me – then know this:

I have certain ethics and ideals, some more idiotic than others, that are respect-deal-breakers for me. That’s never going to change about me for the simple fact that I like it. It cuts out the bullshit and the heartache, for the most part. Keeps the recycling separated nicely, if you will.

No one should think differently of me, or that they’re special enough to have fit under my extreme ethical radar if they’ve repeatedly committed offenses. I know we’re all special fucking snowflakes, but still, I’m not, nor have I ever been, some one who said that I could accept people unconditionally.

I can’t feel trust for any person who uses, abuses, schmoozes, gossips, cheats, lies, embellishes, cuts down a little person, defames, chooses apathy, elevates themselves or demeans others. Being abusive toward your child, especially without remorse, will cause me to judge, as will things that some still consider minimal, like driving after drinking or shit-talking your ex in front of your children. Choosing to be a girlfriend or a partier instead of a mother or father, to be unemployed when it negatively affects others, to blame others consistently when the common denominator is you… those all cause my eyebrows to raise.

I know that I’m not perfect, I know I’m bitchy and reactive, or needy and suspicious, or removed, or stifling. I don’t have a problem admitting those things about myself. I know I’ve sucked major ween in several areas, not the least of which was being manipulative with men or letting people in. But that’s who I am, and it’s my story, and I’m working on it, and I’m upfront about it before the fact.

And I’m accepting of some one’s right to judge me for it.

I also know that I’ve done things to cause others to lose respect or trust in me at some point, and I wouldn’t expect someone to accept me unconditionally afterward, either. I would have to earn trust back, over a long and lengthy process. And it would be worth it for me to do all of that work.

Why? Because my ethics also call for me to try to make up for ethical failings. So that I can respect myself.

On my birthday

I was supposed to ride the light train. That’s all I wanted. I didn’t want anyone to make me dinner or buy me flowers or hand me presents. I didn’t expect envelopes of cash or to get drunk, or away from my kid for the entire evening. All I wanted was to ride the light train through the park with my best friends and our applicable kids and wonder in the beauty of trees lit up with holiday merriment.

I didn’t get to ride the train.

The whys aren’t important, and the people who didn’t come matter not in this tale. What matters is only this: I didn’t get to ride that train – the thing I’d been looking forward to for at least a month – and it was totally fine because I? Had the best birthday that I’ve ever had, as far back as my memory will allow me to go before reaching the black void.

No one made me dinner or bought me flowers; there was a single envelope with cash it in, yes, but I got no other presents. And this was all better than fine, because that envelope with a $50 bill in it was given by one of my best friends with the specific intent that I go to Ikea and spend it frivolously on myself, while she babysat my daughter.

I awoke to, and got all day, emails, texts, tweets, DMs and things written on my wall – 82 people I should thank properly that I don’t think I’ll ever really get around to doing. I got called beautiful and gorgeous more times in one day than in the rest of my life. I felt full, proud, lucky, surrounded by fabulous souls.

Yeah, I know that was a little too hippy.

I did go to Ikea. I spent half of that red bill on a little, plain, ready-to-be painted kitchen table that we really needed, completely unfrivolously. So unfrivolously that I was also going to buy a humongous cutting board that would actually fit over all of my counter-top space – so I could use it for baking, when I need to roll out dough and I don’t want little tile indentations – but I put it away, even though it was merely $20, would have reduced a lot of energy and baking avoidance and I not only had $50 to play with, but also $18 kicking around on a gift card, too. I can always use the new table to roll on, right?

I’m not so good at quick transformations.

After collecting my spawn, we headed home to meet some close friends who’d been advised that instead of the train, we would be partaking in the first now-annual tradition of decorating the tree on my birthday.

Flying

With Love Actually in the background, my new table’s pieces littering a corner and my old coffee table tossed out by two strong young men for the neighbours to adopt, we accidentally sang All you need is love together, while stringing lights.

All you need

We set to work individually, forming paperclips into ornament hangers, handing Zoë the ready-for-the-tree ones and reminding the anal one in the group (who wasn’t me, for once) that it didn’t have to be perfect – it just had to be a tree, in my house, decorated.

The final touch

Then I made them move it a couple of inches, because it wasn’t centred on the tree skirt.

Okay, so maybe I was a little anal retentive

We rested afterwards, some with champagne, some tea, and all pizza. There wasn’t a cake, but the meal definitely covered the high-calorie-requirement for a birthday celebration.

Then, we split off, leaving me sitting in the dark with only one other soul, staring at my first very-own, from scratch christmas tree of substance and realizing that not only was it the best birthday I’d had, likely ever, but that I finally truly understood what happiness felt like.
Peace