Archive for November, 2008

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The snowflakes.. they melt into my tears and you can’t tell which is which

November 24, 2008

I sit here at my kitchen table

Looking out into a sea of white

Sipping a warm hot chocolate, yet still feeling a coolness stir inside of me

I wonder where you are right now,

what you are doing or whether you even read here

I try to understand you but I can’t pretend anymore

Why is loving you so hard

what are you afraid of

If the world ended tomorrow, we wouldn’t know how great we would be together

because we would be exactly that … great

I can love you like you need to be loved

I can kiss you like you have never been kissed before

I can squeeze your hand softly to let you know things will be ok when they don’t seem to be

I can be all that you need because I need you

You may not be good for me but I know that you are for me

How crazy is that

You cannot pretend that I am not here because I am

You know that I am and your heart knows that I am

so what’s your deal

I can fill that big space of yours ever so nicely don’t you think

DON’T YOU THINK

There is no pretending you see, its just you and me

as it should be

But for now I will venture out into the white

and I will cry

but you won’t know that

because it is snowing outside

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Wonderland

November 18, 2008

I need the pill for sanity but can’t remember if it was the blue one or the pink one?

This one is going to be brief as it is 2:11 am right now and this is the fifth night of little to no sleep.

This weekend (which can hardly be called a weekend because the word itself exudes the notion of a break, some relaxation, doing fun things or just plain nothing and this wasn’t even close to that) I ran around like a bat out of hell.  My weekend consisted of the following: visiting a baking supply store in the heart of mississauga (prices were ridiculously high) but here I found some great finds; four trips to Michael’s art store (yes, effin’ crazy i know); 6 dollar stores to acquire an idiotic amount of coloured tissue paper (you will see why in some pics next week); making the darn cutest invitations you’ve ever laid your eyes on and luminaria-making :P   …. Martha has got nothing on me!

Anyway, i know it doesn’t sound like much but when you’re feeling shitey with life in general any small thing gets exascerbated to something huge, unbearable and monumental.  What is so strange, yet so typical of me is that I know exactly what I need to do to get me back on the path to good, but yet there’s a part of me that just frankly doesn’t give a shit any more.  Its the voice of helplessness with an unwillingness or “lack of motivation” to do even the little routine things in life.  Its a sad state really and I’m not trying to host a pity party or feel sorry for myself, it just is what it is. 

Anyway, enough of this … on to random tidbit … I have kittens … FIVE of them!!!!!!!!!!

So here’s the deal, I’m mom to the most adorable and loving pup, Ernie and although I’m not opposed to cats, I don’t love them enough to want one as a pet … until a week ago when suddenly mother cat had five adorable little kittens in my backyard.  I made the mistake (if you want to call it that) of feeding them because the “mother” in me worried for their nourishment or lack there of and now they inhabit my yard.  They sleep in the window well but often i find them laying and playing in the grass and on my patio furniture.  Ernie is not a fan of them, however both myself and lil’ miss have become quite enamored.  I tried calling The Toronto Humane Society and Toronto Cat Rescue to come retrieve them but both refused due to being at capacity.  I don’t know what to do????  I tried finding them homes but there haven’t been any takers.

So apparently between my dog, our newly acquired fish (three that my dad has graciously gifted his grand-daughter) and the five kittens and one mother cat, I feel like I live in a flippin zoo!!!  All the while, losing my sanity a little bit at a time.

Down the rabbit hole we will go ….

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Its just one big merry-go-round, minus the pretty horses

November 12, 2008

I’ve been birthday/party planning for one very special amazing little girl .. more about that later

For now, I’m exhausted.

I’m running strictly on caffeine in any form I can take it and it is no wonder that i’ve been a bundle of nerves.  That would most definitely explain that “shaky-feeling” huh?

I’ve been having anxiety attacks all week and just want some normalcy already.

My life feels like it is spinning out of control, yet again, and I don’t really now how to handle it anymore.  Frankly, I’m tried of trying.

Christmas is sneaking up on me and what once was a season that I looked forward to, is slowly becoming one big chore that is lurking ahead.  Normal Tina would already have christmas cards written and ready for stamping, recipes organized for baking, christmas shopping started, and house decorated all the while enjoying copious amounts of festive decorated latte cups (and hot chocolate of course).  In this moment however, I find myself exhausted and stressed, filled with anxiety and taking on more than I can chew in an attempt to feel normal (the latter has completely blown up in my face because I think I can take it all on, I work through it like a horse only to feel like a darn failure when I dont accomplish all that I set out to do .. it is quite a counter-productive exercise that I only realize now in hindsight). The copious amounts of caffeine though, I got that one down .. got’er good actually.

I’m trying to get my shit together and I really am hoping that I can get back to the gym and “come around.”  It seems that working out is the only thing that truly helps get my serotonin levels back up.  Plus it is my time to zone out … you know, clear my head to make room for some positivity. 

But for now, I’m busy, too busy actually… busy as I can possibly be.

In the next two weeks I will be crafting and decorating to recreate a “mad hatter tea party” for lil’ miss C which will include an astronomical amount of baking and cooking, invitation making, sign painting, flower-making, tea set searching …  you get the idea, yes?  Put into the mix, christmas shopping, minor house renos and some dinner hosting.  I’m exhausted even thinking about all of this.  “Little steps” is what I keep trying to tell myself but fuck it doesn’t work.

Anyhow, I have a shit load of pics to dump on ya’ll, so I will try to get around to it.

Hell I can’t save the world in a day, so for now, I will get back to tending to laundry and dusting while Kings of Leon tunes float in the air.

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A piece of me I will never get back …

November 6, 2008

I hope to have the courage to finish this post. 

I have wanted to write about this for a week now but each time I attempted to begin, I became overwhelmed with emotion and the idea of bringing all the sadness to the surface once again was not something I was strong enough for.

Today will be the day …. the day I choose to write about a great man that I was lucky enough to call uncle.

My uncle, Frank, was diagnosed with liver cancer early this past June.  With what seemed to be an ordinary emergency room trip for painful stomach bloating turned out to be the start of the most difficult struggle in his life; one in which he would ultimately lose.

Bad turned to worse quickly.  He was diagnosed with terminal cancer and it was a matter of time.  To avoid the idea of living life by the clock, he proceeded with chemotherapy taking one day at a time.  Some days were relatively good (because all it is is just that, “relative”) and most days were very very terrible ones.  Odds were against him right from the get-go, but I can honestly state with great admiration that my uncle was hopeful … hopeful and determined to beat this.  And it was this spirit that I believe helped him to stay with us, albeit difficult, for four months. 

I can say in hindsight, I feel very guilty as I was one of the many that encouraged him to continue treatment eventhough doctors advised against it.  You see, I too was hopeful and maybe to some “delusional” that somehow he could miraculously crush the odds and conquer the disease; or “buy” more time at the very least.  Had I known that his last four months would be spent bed ridden, continuosly poked, prodded and drained only to lose his battle in the end, I would have simply encouraged him to stop treatment and enjoy what time he had; eating what he wanted, drinking how much he wanted, smoking at whatever time he wanted … simply doing WHATEVER it is that he desired. The problem is that in life we just don’t know the road that lies ahead.  Every now and then we are privy to hearing peoples’ miraculous stories of beating odds, testing new and alternative treatments and going into remission … we hung on to the hope that just maybe he too could be one of these unbelievably rare stories.  Sadly, it wasn’t.

My uncle left us the evening of Tuesday October 21, 2008 at Princess Margaret Hospital here in Toronto.

It wasn’t peaceful or so it seemed.  His potassium levels that day were skyrocket high and at one point in the evening he found himself suddenly fighting for breath.  They tried to resuscitate him but his heart just couldn’t handle the disease any longer.  That night at 10:30pm I got the call and at that moment a part of my heart chipped away.  My brother came to pick me up and we immediately rushed to his bed side to say our final goodbyes and to be some sort of strength for my aunt and cousins.   I quickly found out that there are no words that you can possibly ever say to anyone in that moment that they lose their husband and father that will make any sense, or make them feel better or buy time … at that point, you can only be present and offer a shoulder for them to lean on and cry.

I was not prepared for what I saw and felt that cold October night.  His room looked like a tornado had hit, you both saw and sensed the struggle that went on there.  The staff did everything possible to keep him alive.  Things were pushed and thrown out of the way, wrappers for syringes, tubes and paddles were left wherever they landed.  The room was dark and quiet with only a bright light shinning on his face.  Hands by his side, mouth open and eyes half shut; he lay there .. with no semblance of how he once looked.  Empty …only a shell with his wife and sons by his bed trying to deal with the loss of the one thing that was most important to them.

I immediately wanted to vomit.  My anxiety was at an all time high.  I felt my heart race, flushed with heat and about to black out, I walked out of the room.  There I paced the halls trying to stop my tears and resume my heart beat to normal.  In that moment, everything stopped and every sound became silent as if I was a ghost watching life from a different place.  I looked back in the room … I saw him, I saw them hunched over him crying … I looked out into the hall way and saw the nurses at the station talk amongst themselves like it was just an ordinary day.  I saw beds being undone and prepared for the next death-in-waiting.  The nurse methodically grabbed the crisp white sheets from the metal shelf and continued to make a bed while in my head I knew that this was probably the hundredth time she’d done it that month …. she had it down to a science.  They walked around the halls with their expressionless faces and soft voices delivering news as if they were going around to deliver the paper.  Gurgling sounds and coughing sounds and last breaths rung through my ears as I passed each room only to land back at his door where I broke down reading a note my cousins had wrote for the nurses thanking them for their generosity and kindness in his last days.  Here I lost it.  Here I questionned why life has to be as such.

My uncle was a man that loved life.  He had a laugh that was rooted right from the depths of his belly and echoed across the galaxy.  He was a joker … always with a smile painted on his face.  He loved computers and electronics and all the gadgets known to man.  He was an entertainer and a great musician.  He always welcomed strangers to his home bar while enjoying cognac and a cigar.  He was a ladies man, but more so than that, he was one big teddy bear that you always wanted around.  He was a devoted husband, a loving father and one great uncle that I will forever miss. 

He was taken from us at the young age of 53.  He will never see his sons marry, he will never enjoy the pleasures of being a grand parent or enjoy retirement vacations with his wife.  He will never be at our Thanksgiving table or at our Christmas table or Easter table for that matter.  I will never again hear him call me anit (we had a backward language going on) and I will never again receive a birthday card with that stupid looking ziggy figure he used to draw to look like a postage stamp.

I miss him so much.  I miss his voice and his laugh.  I miss his smile and his hug.

Uncle knarf, may your soul be resting in peace.  I know that you are with God in a place where you are free without pain and happy.  I know you are watching over us.  Please give them strength in this time of loss. They, we, all of us, miss you dearly.  We love you.

Soar high dear uncle…soar high.

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You keep coming around here …

November 4, 2008

I know I have had nothing for you for some time now

I’m hoping tonight will be different