…take 3…

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I’ve noticed a trend. Whenever I survive a huge change in my life, my mind drifts back to the graceful 30. I know there are people out there that have the capacity to blog while experiencing major life changes…I am not one of those people. So, here we are…years later…once again…I’m hoping to give this blog the time it truly deserves.

My life has changed. In big ways. In big, unexpected ways. I waltzed into my 30s expecting the type of life I’ve spent decades reading about courtesy of my favorite authors Nora Roberts, Jude Deveraux and Catherine Coulter. I had married my very best friend. We had taken friendship over its boundaries and into love. We had grown together. We had become a family. It was perfect. Gorgeous house, sweet puppy and the promise of this amazing new chapter in our lives. I didn’t think I could ask for anything more.

Things weren’t entirely perfect. They were pretty damn close to perfect but there was one thing I needed desperately that was missing. We never argued. We were always on the same page. Partners in everything. We loved to travel, play games, watch movies. It was so easy for us to just be. We never ran out of things to talk about. We challenged one another intellectually. We pushed each other to achieve great things. We laughed a lot. We had so much fun. So this one little thing that wasn’t perfect? I could deal with it. Eventually, this too would pass and we’d look back on our relationship and smile at all we had accomplished together. We had plans. Big plans and an understanding of the sacrifices it would take to get us there. I was on board. I made my own sacrifices. I put his career ahead of my own. I supported his aspirations and I waited. I waited for the one thing I so desperately wanted and needed. There was always a valid reason to put it off. I understood. Timing was everything, right?

Whenever I would voice my concerns, wants, needs…he’d hit me with the he’s “not happy in our marriage” talk and tell me “things needed to change”. I would freak out because I could never see his unhappiness. The only time I’d ever known about it was when I’d bring up mine. So, I’d snap back to the wife he wanted me to be to ensure he remained happy. I would shove my concerns, wants and needs aside…I needed to keep my husband happy. This cycle went on for years…whenever I’d stray off the path he wanted me on and try to communicate with him…he’d hit me with the talk and like a puppet, I’d straighten up. When I finally worked up the nerve to stand my ground with him his response to me was simple: “If having children is what it’s going to take to make you happy, you need to find someone else to be with.”

My world quaked.

People will ask if we never talked about having children. We did. We talked about everything. Before we got married and after. There was only one time he told me he didn’t want children before we got married. We were still dating and I didn’t say anything at the time. I stewed about his admission and realized that having children was non-negotiable for me. It saddened me but I didn’t believe there was any reason to continue a relationship that would go nowhere. I didn’t want to waste either of our times. It wasn’t right or fair to either of us.

Had I just walked away then, we may have still remained best of friends. I’d like to think it would have been an amicable separation filled with understanding and acceptance of our different desires. Unfortunately, two weeks after his initial confession, we were in his car heading to dinner and he turned to me and told me that he had had an epiphany that day. He told me that he had been thinking of his father and he realized not having children would be a huge mistake.

I never told him how close we had come to going our separate ways. I never told him my concerns about his initial confession nor how relieved I was when he had his epiphany. I loved him and we were really great together. I didn’t want to have to walk away from that and I was grateful I didn’t have to. While the memory of those two weeks has never been forgotten, I filed it away accepting his epiphany as the truth.

Years-removed from the situation, I could see clearly just how manipulated I had been in my marriage. I trusted blindly, accepted excuses willingly…after all, he was my best friend. If I couldn’t trust him as my partner who could I trust? I stayed longer than any sane woman would have and I suffered for it deeply. He had made me believe I was incapable of being desired or wanted. He made me feel repulsive and he played me. He betrayed the trust I had put in him as my husband and my best friend. He knowingly, willingly and selfishly ran out my biological clock while stringing me along and I don’t know if I will ever find it in my heart to forgive him.

The breakdown of our marriage was a long, lonely road. At a time when most people would lean on their best friends for guidance, support and love…I couldn’t. I had married mine. I had no one to talk to. No one who knew just how to help me wade through this miserable time in my life. And to make matters worse, the man who “wasn’t cut out to be a husband and was too selfish to be in a relationship” was out there dating as if had held him back all of this time. Maybe I had.

So, here I am….closer to 40 than I am to 30…looking back on a decade that I had such high hopes for. Nothing has turned out the way I had hoped or expected it to. I would be lying if I said I didn’t harbor some bitterness. I wonder if I always will. These last few years have changed me and I am not entirely in love with the person I’ve become. However, I am well on my way to starting over and I hope to find a small shred of the girl – so full of hope, excitement, kindness, promise and love – that I used to be along the way.

– M.

 

…settling back in…

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It has been quite an interesting start to my 30s. Life took over rapidly and didn’t leave room for very much else. I took a new job believing I would have more time for myself; however, that job required a lot of time and attention. We purchased our first home which was a nerve-wracking and proud moment for us both. I got a promotion at work, he got picked up for school, my sister moved in with us…it was a busy time. Upon graduation from school, he got new orders that would take us from California to Nebraska. With this move, I foresee a lot more time for me to pursue my hobbies and interests.

The move to Nebraska was not an easy one for me; it was as though I was leaving home again for the third time. Even more difficult because so much is going on in my family life back home and I hate not being there with them. We barely spent a year in our home (as homeowners) which was pretty depressing because I had just started ramping up my home remodel board on Pinterest. We had both decided to wait at least 1 year before making any huge (financial) changes to the home. And truth be told, I loved my job. I loved what I had accomplished there, the processes I had to developed, the flow I had established and the relationships I had cultivated at and for the place I worked. The list of reasons to stay in California far-outweighed my reasons for leaving. There isn’t a day that has gone by that I haven’t wondered if I’ve made a huge mistake. Mistakes seems to be the theme of my life for the last 6 months…and I genuinely thought I left mistake-making in my 20s. Ha!

So, as I slowly attempt to settle in, I can now take the time to return to the graceful 30. I have found the perfect place to write in my new home: the kitchen table. I can enjoy the warm, inviting light of the sun rising over my backyard and the deep sighs of two dogs curled up at my feet. It’s peaceful here on the kitchen table with a house free of other humans.

I have been beckoned to rekindle my love of writing and so I will.

– M.

…the new runner…

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I remember a time in my life when I did not actively have to think or worry about being fit. My closet was filled with size 0 or 2 clothes, I could look down and see my toes and I could eat as much of everything as I wanted without a care in the world. Before I hit 30, I had promised myself that I would try to eat better and take my fitness more seriously. A promise I never kept. Now that I’m 30, the time has come for me to face the harsh reality that if I don’t start taking care of myself now, I may find myself joining the ranks of too many other people who would rather sit on a couch watching American Idol, rather than taking an hour out of their day to commit to their health.

Luckily, I do not watch American Idol and I have never really eaten badly. My problem has been that instead of taking the time to discover new recipes and make them at home, we’d hit the road and enjoy 1700-calorie entrees at a restaurant. While it’s not fast food, it can still be considered junk food. Sidebar: Clearly, entering my 30s means I’ll be spending more time in the kitchen so let’s move onto what this post is really about.

Running! Never have I done it just to do it. When I played soccer, running sort of happened. My soccer days were eons ago and chasing after my new puppy leaves me completely out of breath (not to mention utterly embarrassed for being so). I’ve decided to take up running. Daily. For 30 minutes. Why running? One of the most important reasons is because it is one activity I plan on doing with my husband every day. Fitness is an important part of his career and I want to make it an important part of our family life as well. Second, runners have absolutely gorgeous legs. Third, see second.

I found a running plan for beginning runners on Runner’s World (RW). RW came highly recommended from a friend. Their plan seemed easy enough for me. It’s an 8-week program that conditions you to run continuously for 30 minutes by the end of it. I know that there are a number of running plans for beginners but the only one I can semi-vouch for is this one.

I started the plan a few months ago and had a lot of success with the first two weeks. I was absolutely devastated when shin splints kept me from seeing this program to completion; it took weeks for the pain to disappear. Although I haven’t been able to start back up again due to a very odd work schedule, a recent shift in my permanent work schedule will make it easier for me to pursue this program again for the foreseeable future. I will be documenting my daily progress as soon as I start up again. Wish me luck!

…a look back at 20…

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I was decidedly nervous about turning 30. Had I lived enough in my 20s to take on my 30s? Did I still act and dress like a 20-year old? Was I ready for 30? Sure, there’s a chance I may be the only person in the universe to put so much thought into turning 30 but I highly doubt it. One of the most important questions I had to ask myself was whether or not I had done everything I wanted to do before I turned 30. And the answer was…sort of.

I successfully pursued a college education so I get a check mark in the ‘attain college degree’ box. Since I’ve traveled to New Zealand, Australia, Hawaii, Alaska, Canada, Thailand, England, Scotland, France, Italy and Germany in my 20s, I can easily mark off the ‘travel thoroughly’ box. I started a job in the financial industry that turned into an impressive career before the market fiasco of 2008…so ‘find a career‘ check. I fell in love with my best friend and married him two days before my 30th birthday, so phew…’marry soul-mate‘ box checked.

I’ve jet-boated, bungee-jumped, sky-dived and attended a ridiculous number of social gatherings. I did not get the opportunity to get a makeover and reinvent my look. My plans for children in my twenties did not take off but a bitter end to a relationship saw me take sole custody of an adorable Yorkie…so quasi-check? I’ve lost old friends and gained new ones, moved from coast to coast and even somewhere in the middle, and I’ve survived the drama, the pain and all of the lessons life opted to teach me in that whirlwind decade.

Am I satisfied with my 20s? I think so. I’ve had a lot of good and some pretty bad…but all in all, I’ve got a phenomenal setup for my 30s. I will get the opportunity for a makeover of both myself and my wardrobe (out with the sweatpants 20s…in with the graceful 30s) and I will enjoy every second of my newly-married life. It doesn’t get any better than marrying your best friend, does it? Unless your name is Catherine, of course, and you happen to fall in love with a handsome prince in college whom you’ll eventually marry in an absolutely gorgeous wedding ceremony. But that’s a post for an entirely different day…

…to 30 with grace…

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A new year always calls for a moment to reflect on your accomplishments, successes and failures. The hope being, of course, that you will somehow better yourself in the year to come. It’s a clean slate; a chance to start again. This is how I viewed entering my 30s…a chance to look back, reflect, assess, and reinvent myself. I have no regrets (okay, perhaps a few lessons learned that I believe I could have done without) but enter 30: the decade of maturity and the chance for my clean slate.

I never anticipated starting a Martha Stewart-esque blog nor a how-to guide on dinner etiquette nor a DIY journal of ways to spruce up a dreary home. I can also admit that I do not plan on writing about the daily trials and tribulations of the Royals or Hollywood. In full disclosure, I should probably say that as I chart my graceful entrance into my 30s, I will be looking toward those individuals in my age group for inspiration. Duchess of Cambridge, I do apologize but you were born a few months before I was and are by far the most graceful 30 year old and a true inspiration to girls around the world. While this blog is not dedicated to the former Catherine Middleton, she may grace a post every so often (please keep the eye rolls to a minimum).

Here, I’ll end my very first post and tomorrow, I will truly begin. Happy New Year!