The Vase Broke Today

Way to give it all away up front. But that’s just what happened this morning.

After my shower I was reaching for the cotton pads to apply toner to my face when I accidentally pushed the whole cotton “tower” against the vase and it slide off the shelf and crashed to the floor.

It broke into a few pieces too many. It cannot be fixed.

The vase was mint green with a pretty fuchsia rose to the front of it. The fuchsia rose that broke off completely and now lay in a fuchsia heap next to mint green shards. I left the pieces right where they fell.

I wasn’t particularly sentimental about that vase, even though it was one of the last remnants of the tchotchkes my mother kept. I knew why she liked it too. It was the rose to the front of it. She also kept a candle in it. A pretty, soft pink votive that complemented the colours of the vase. I suppose that made the vase a candle holder more than anything else.

I remember Christmas after Christmas, giving the vase a little wipe…the candle too and putting them back on the shelf with all her other keepsakes.

However, the candle remained unlit. While she had it and then when it remained in the things I kept. All these years, I promised myself I would light it someday. Today it rests on its side in the middle of mint green shards.

The vase broke today and I am going to have to clean it up. It is funny though, how one thing leads to another. The sound of that vase shattering on the floor sparked a memory.

Most families have their own unique way of celebrating special moments with those they hold dear. For me, as a child, one the best parts about Christmas besides all the lovely presents of course was all the preparations that lead up to the big Day.

My mother loved everything about Christmas, and she put a lot of effort into the preparations, from the cleaning to the food to the “putting away the house” for the actual day. Our house would look like a hurricane passed through well into the wee hours of Christmas Day.

The last thing to be done after she had everything “just so” was the Hanging Of The Curtains…the pièce de résistance of all her hard work, which she would have sewn herself.

Well into adulthood, the presents and spending time with family in a house that smelled yummily like freshly baked bread and ham with a hint of pinesol seemed like the best reward for the hours of back-breaking, finger-wrinkling cleaning, wiping, mopping and any other chore my mother deemed necessary.

We would have washed, cobwebbed, swept and polished until everything had a shine unrivaled by anything the North Pole could conjure.

Christmas Eve 2010, four months after my mother died, I was at a bar with my sister and a couple close friends who had lost their mother the previous year. There we were with no real rush to get home…on Christmas Eve.

The rest of the world was hustling and bustling to get last-minute presents, making hasty trips to the grocery, the air itself tingling with the excitement and energy. There we were, grieving into our beers.

For the first time in all my life I had absolutely no reason to rush home on Christmas Eve. There was no cleaning to be done…there was no one to do it for.

Since then, I have avoided doing anything ‘sentimental’ for Christmas. Yes, I buy presents and last year I managed to fix brunch for the Sibs and their spouses. But I haven’t had the actual spirit, that familiar excitement that comes with all the preparations.

I don’t know what it was about the vase breaking this morning or the candle that remained unlit inside it, but it was almost as if I woke up. This was some pretty heavy stuff to be contemplating first thing in the morning…without having had coffee.

Thing is, the vase and the pink, unlit candle were just reminders of her, things I kept. Yet, today they reminded me of how happy Christmas made her, of how getting things ready for the Day was a big production for her and how happy I used to be…because I was part of making it happen.

The vase falling and shattering this morning was just a breaking with the past; a putting to rest of mint green vases that held unlit candles.

I will clean it up later.


NaBloPoMo November 2014

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There are only a few hours left in 2013 and I’m so proud of me for having stuck with Blogher’s NaBloPoMo December. I started this journey with a Gratitude post and I am ending on that note as well.

I AM SO GRATEFUL FOR TODAY.

I got to feel the sun on my skin. I made peace with the past. I cried. I lit a candle for all that was and for all that is yet to come. I lived to see today. I don’t know what tomorrow will bring and in this moment I am whole and happy.

If you don’t design your own life plan, chances are you’ll fall into someone else’s plan. And guess what they have planned for you? Not much. – Jim Rohn

As I sit here toasting all that went down in 2013, I keep asking myself…if the life I’m creating by the choices I’m making propelling me towards my best self? I think I stuck to the Manifesto I created for 2013. I walked in Truth and now my heart is bigger, busted wide open and ready even more Love. I am a better version of me and I truly love the woman I am growing into. As I think about those choices that led me to this moment and with a full heart, I set my intention for MORE in 2014. I want:

More of what counts.

More of what is important to me. The people I love. I plan to tell them every chance I get. Starting with the family lime we usually have on New Year’s Day. I am so lucky to still have the chance to tell them.

More Writing.

After writing inconsistently for most of the year because I’m lazy for all kinds of reasons, I finally turned things around by successfully completing this month’s NaBloPoMo challenge. I am proud to say I wrote/posted in this space every day for December. *throws confetti* Thank you for reading!

More Travel.

This year I visited New York City, D.C., Virginia, Grenada and St Vincent. I have been bitten by the travel bug hard. I am craving new experiences. So next year, I plan to go much further, I already have four trips planned and I am super excited about them!

More time with my Cohort of Awesome.

I haven’t been very good at keep in touch with my family and friends who live afar…this is anybody who does not live in my neighbourhood. I know, I know! Thankfully my sister and brother live within a few blocks of me. My sister is the family whisperer though. She knows everything that’s happening with everybody. While I don’t think I can get to her level of social prowess, in 2014 I plan to do better than I’ve done this year. These are the people who make this journey of mine worthwhile. I need to make sure they know I appreciate them.

More self-care.

You know how when you fly on an airplane, the flight attendant instructs you to put your oxygen mask on first, before helping others? Do you know why this is an important rule for ensuring survival? You put on your oxygen mask first, because if you run out of oxygen, you can’t help anyone else with their mask. I had a massage last week and when the masseuse got to my shoulders and neck we both could feel the knots. It was p a i n f u l. She immediately said to me that this is my health I’m playing with. Why was I carrying so much stress? If something happens to me…because I allowed stress to make me sick, guess what…I can’t help anybody and life will go on without me. I CHOOSE to be here to celebrate life in 2014. Bring on those massages!

The biggest lesson I’ve learned this year is that Happiness is not a destination, it’s a journey and it’s one that you begin from within. It is simply doing the things every single day that move you closer to your best possible self.

Happy New Year to all of you. I wish you only the best.

Light & Love.

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I’m participating in BlogHer’s NaBloPoMo Challenge for the month of December:

NaBloPoMo_MoreLess

You can read some awesome entries here: NaBloPoMo December

I want less…

“Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.” – Albert Einstein

I gave my microwave to a close friend who was moving into her first apartment a few months ago. Instead of replacing it, I got a toaster oven instead. What would have taken 2 minutes in the microwave now takes 15 minutes…and I couldn’t be happier. We live in an instant gratification” age and the fact that I have to spend a little time waiting for something to toast or warm up is teaching me patience. In 2014 I want less haste.

My apartment is just the right size for me. I have just enough space to teach me the difference between wants and needs. I am learning to only buy/keep only the things that bring me pleasure and to say no to the non-essentials. In 2014 I want less of the unnecessary.

On vacation in October, I had chocolate cake and it made me sick. I threw up every last bite. It definitely didn’t taste as good the second time around. I had no choice but to finally admit it to myself…chocolate makes me sick. Yes…sometimes all the world’s problems can be solved with a piece of dark chocolate…but it’s not worth the migraines and nausea anymore. I need to find a less painful way to solve the world’s problems. In 2014 I want less chocolate and sugar.

I was at a wedding on Saturday. It was the union of two young people I grew up with. The ceremony was held in the church we all grew up in. The church I stopped going to after mummy died…because it held too many memories. Since her funeral, my sister and brother got married there, we also had Luke’s farewell Mass there as well. It’s a mixture of happy and sad. But something happened to me during the wedding ceremony of my friends. The church felt like home. And I missed the community. I want a church community where everybody knows my name… In 2014 I want less just-a-face-in-the-crowd kinda worship.

“The secret of happiness, you see, is not found in seeking more, but in developing the capacity to enjoy less.” – Socrates

As 2013 is slips away, what would you like less of in 2014?

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I’m participating in BlogHer’s NaBloPoMo Challenge for the month of December:

NaBloPoMo_MoreLess

You can read some awesome entries here: NaBloPoMo December

How sweet it is…

Strawberry  Mascarpone Tart

Strawberry & Mascarpone Tart
courtesy my sister-in-law

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I’m participating in BlogHer’s NaBloPoMo Challenge for the month of December:

NaBloPoMo_MoreLess

You can read some awesome entries here: NaBloPoMo December

UNPACKED

According to 1000 Awesome Things…”packed boxes are ghosts.”

When I moved into my apartment over two years ago I unpacked everything except 5 large cardboard boxes. I’ve been delaying unpacking these last few things because there was a part of me that felt if I unpacked ALL the boxes then this “new” space would not really be temporary. I felt that if I unpacked everything then it means that I have really moved on. I’ve truly said goodbye to my childhood.

All this time I have had these 5 boxes in my tiny kitchen and lived with them…they became part of the room. Inside they held my mother’s things: Crockery, bowls, glasses…the first prize I ever won at a school sports day. Until now I just could not face unpacking them…it was 3 parts I don’t want to unpack mummy’s things and 1 part laziness.

Biggest surprise: I did not cry. Not even when I removed the wrapping on her prized CorningWare bowls. Instead, as I carefully washed them I remembered the meals we used to prepare in them and I thought about the ones I have yet to create. I look forward to using them. No ghosts here.

Today’s prompt asks whether you’re doing the holidays larger or smaller this year? While I don’t have that much Christmas spirit…no decorations or lights or even a tree…I guess I’m doing Christmas on a larger scale (for me) this year. Unpacking my mother’s things and handling that as well as I did, has shown me that I have made some major progress in my journey with grief. I also cleaned more than I did last year and the year before that…that’s for damn sure. My aching shoulders are testament to how much cleaning has been going on. I’m not even completely finished too. I’m on break right now…

So as I sit and type this in my kitchen/living room I cannot help but note that my apartment feels lighter because those boxes are gone.

I realize too that despite how tired I am right now…I feel lighter because I’m moving forward.

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I’m participating in BlogHer’s NaBloPoMo Challenge for the month of December:

NaBloPoMo_MoreLess

You can read some awesome entries here: NaBloPoMo December