Saturday, July 31, 2021

Combatting the Great Resignation

 Those of us who have adapted to telework over the last year are facing an enormous shift in priorities as many employers attempt to return to 100% office presence. While I agree that the human connection and socialization is necessary to build a strong team, I believe we’re also seeing that there must be a combination of in-person and telework opportunities whenever possible if employers desire to keep good employees on the pay roll.

The antiquated mentality that work only gets done in an office has not only been proven false, but likely detrimental to a company’s bottom line. There are bosses who suspiciously insist that their employees are kept directly under their thumb (and at their desks) lest they bilk the company for precious time and money, instead of asking the more obvious question – is the work getting done? If the answer is yes, does it matter where it was done? Creating flexibility for your people not only builds trust, but actually increases their physical and mental health, which every company gives at least lip service as to supporting.

Working from home means not having to spend time getting ready in the morning, packing meals, and dealing with a sometimes lengthy, stressful, and costly commute – especially with gas prices currently soaring. In some cases, working from home can add almost three hours to a worker’s day and a nice bump in their paycheck as they are saving money on gas, lunch outings, and snack bar expenditures. We’ve often over the years joked, but seriously wished for more hours in our days. We can have it. What can you do or have you done with that time over the last year?

For me, I know it’s sometimes meant enjoying the peach pancakes my husband makes in the morning,
basking in a sun drenched afternoon office either indoors or outdoors as weather permits, taking a short walks around the property with my dogs, squeezing a nice run through my neighborhood, watering and tending to my plants, time to learn guitar, gratefully having lunch with my children and hearing about their day and sharing their lives, or even completing a few household chores that typically go neglected during the week only to overwhelm me and absorb what little time I would ordinarily have on my only two days off. The old weekly grind of “work-work-work-work-work, then frantically scramble for two days to maintain a household, family, fitness and friendships, only to repeat the same cycle again the next week” needs to be a thing of the past. There is a better way to moderate our lives and fit all of our necessary activities and desires into each treasurable day. Instead of sitting in an office for eight straight hours, why not give workers the opportunity to start earlier and end later as they weave other parts of their life into the day? There is no need to rush out of work at 5:00pm if you’re already home. In fact, work becomes a more fluid concept that fits far better into the already frenzied lives we’ve created as a society. Those that are teleworking aren’t working less, they are simply working with clearer minds and a higher sense of achievement that goes far beyond simply paying a mortgage. We are able to not only meets the needs of our employers, but also more easily able to meet the needs of our day to day lives, relationships, and passions.

Before COVID, we read endlessly about the enormous stress Americans were under as our workforce continued to ask us to put longer hours in the office and still face enormous guilt and worry if you decide to utilize what little vacation you might have earned. As Americans, we take far less vacations than the rest of the world. We somehow believe that longer hours and less time off mean a higher payout because we mistakenly measure our successes by our salaries and bank accounts. Meanwhile, our mental and physical health has and continues to decline. During the lockdown months, we also saw a surge in mental health issues as we removed personal connections and added enormous uncertainty and fear to the mix. As the dust continues to settle (and perhaps flare up again), Americans have learned to adjust to a telework environment, and I believe a hybrid mix of office and telework opportunities may be the key to a resurgence in attitudes, health, and productivity for the workforce – but only if employers are willing to grow and accept this new reality.


If we are serious about turning the tide on American health, perhaps we focus less heavily on basic medication and inoculations and instead encourage more telework while incentivizing our workers to partake in healthier activities and connections with the time they will save during a commute. Perhaps running, yoga, walking, stretching, and even mentally beneficial exercises like learning new skills and hobbies? The healthier we are, the happier we may become. For those bosses still adamant about maintaining a hefty bottom line and equating that to butts in chairs – I must point out that healthy workers are also more productive and incur less health care costs, thus boosting your profits while continuing to advance your mission. And happy people who feel trusted, valued, and cared for will always be your best performers.

We are seeing now what has been called “The Great Resignation” as workers are leaving in droves those companies which are again requiring full-time, in-person presence. This is less of a disaster than an awakening. People are beginning to see the value in their time, relationships, and overall health. Let us be careful not to confuse an uplifting, empowering revolt with a mere attempt to skirt the system and take advantage of our employers. It is a worthy stance and a silver lining to what has been an otherwise disastrous and soul crushing year. It is an opportunity to prove that we DO actually care about the overall health of our workforce far beyond the topic of COVID.


In this pandemic and perhaps even before, we have sadly lost a bit of civility with each other, and we continue to allow politics and emotions to rip apart friendships and families. However, I sincerely believe the way to emotional and physical healing is to first give people the time and space to work through their thoughts and actions in step with their workforce obligations and not simply in addition to those burdens. The hybrid work force may be the first real step to healing many facets of our lives. And healing, as well as prospering, should always be the goal.

Tuesday, November 3, 2020

Why I Have Hope and No Fear

 While many of us are isolated right now and worried about the future, our livelihood, and our families. I still feel a comfortable calmness amidst the chaos. While I have many shared frustrations, they aren’t things that worry me much as I continue to find ways to entertain myself, keep focused on work and fitness, and end each day with a feeling of accomplishment and reassurance. How do I manage to keep my head amidst the craziness around us? To put it plainly, because I’ve seen so much worse.

When I graduated college in 1993, I was thrust into a military career that I wasn’t entirely enthusiastic about, but needed the scholarship money and decided that if military service was what it took, I’d jump in head first and do it to the best of my ability. I entered the Army Aviation world as the first female pilot assigned to a particular combat unit when they opened those positions to women in 1995. I arrived full of fire and drive for my career. I was recently married but had zero desire for children as I intended to pour myself into my job and continue to break down barriers and stereotypes regarding what women could be in the workforce. Having grown up in a somewhat tumultuous household, I was generally callous to family life and wanted only to hang my aspirations on things that I could control – which was myself and my career. Little did I know that in nine-months’ time, I would recant on everything I believed and desired.

I went to Haiti in 1998 to serve as the Secretary to the Joint Staff, or assistant to the commander of the US Support Group. The group was responsible for humanitarian assistance in the form of mobile hospitals, drilling wells to provide water, building schools for children, providing general security, and sometimes even working with organizations such as Food for the Poor to help feed the people of Port-au-Prince.

Shortly upon arrival, I knew that Haiti would change me. I’d never seen such poverty anywhere other than on my television, which doesn’t begin to provide the full effect of the smell, sounds, and feel of true human neglect. I watched a society so broken it was unable to effectively distribute the assistance it received, and I witnessed suffering in ways I’d never considered from the comfort of the United States. I watched our military hospitals treat unfathomable illnesses due to non-existent sanitation and horrifying hereditary conditions. I then watched parents, after waiting hours in the sun to receive treatment for their loved one, immediately trade medicine for these conditions outside the walls for food because, you see, your child might die eventually from that disease, but before that, they will die of starvation. I watched children bathing in drainage water and carrying buckets of the same for use in the shacks they called home. That same drainage water, before being transported, had already been used as a human toilet further up the road and as a means to rinse filth off cattle. I watched hordes of children and adults clamor around US vehicles in hopes of a handout and I felt the sting of a stick across my hand from a Food for the Poor worker as I tried to give an extra scoop of slop to an adorable child who looked like he needed and deserved it all. Still, if you give more to one, you give none to another, so the struggle was heartbreaking and life changing. I wanted to help them all, but the problem was too vast and complex. It seemed hopeless.

But more profoundly than the extreme poverty I witnessed was a commonality that seemed to bring these people together – and it was love. The same love you see anywhere in the world, but with a different background and circumstance. I began to see that if you have love, you can survive even the darkest, most hopeless and painful conditions. I know because I saw it. I saw smiles on faces of those who had no reason to smile. I saw hope from individuals who had no reason to expect such a luxury. Ultimately, I saw families knitted together in their own meager happiness through it all. I saw laughter and affection, and joy. And it melted my cold, little Grinch heart. I left Haiti knowing that I now wanted children more than anything. My career meant far less as I boarded the plane to depart. I wanted this magic that conquered all fears and hardships.

I returned home early in 1999 and my first child was born in March 2000. Had it not been for Haiti, he, nor his two siblings may ever have graced my life. I’m glad my eyes were opened during those times and I decided to toss my careers goals to the side for the opportunity to groom lives and build better humans. My kids are everything, even though they are now almost all adults and they bring me more joy that I ever imagined.

And today, as I scroll through all the social media and listen to the woes of a nation during the current crisis, I think back to places with real, lasting, and impactful issues that we don’t have to consider. I don’t worry about fresh water, a lack of health care, schools for my children, or safe housing options. I sit at home with my high-speed internet and blog about my gratitude and love for my family and friends. No problem outside my walls is too much to handle because as I learned in Haiti, all you really need to make it through is love. And I have that and more right here. Therefore, I have no fear.


Wednesday, May 27, 2020

Stop the Hate

Here we are again, only weeks from our last remembrance walk/run, watching more hate crimes scroll across our news feed. I’m purposefully not mentioning the victims’ names – not because they don’t matter, but because I want this message to resonate at any time either now or in the future. The names change but the air around us does not. The list of victims alone would make a painfully long novel and I shed tears for them all but I’m definitely not going on another walk for awareness or “understanding.” What I will say is this:

STOP THE HATE. I can type those words over and over, and picture many of you standing up to applaud, yet not noticing the giant shadow of your own hate looming behind you that you’ve made peace with and carry with you every day. It’s okay if it’s aimed at Trump. It’s okay if it’s aimed at Biden. It’s okay if it’s for that guy not wearing a mask. It’s okay if it’s for another nationality, and then finally, it’s okay if it’s for another race or sexuality.

Stephen Covey once said, “We judge ourselves by our intentions and others by their behavior,” and I’ve never seen that sentiment on finer display than I do now while scrolling across any headline or social media outlet today. We’re selling hate to the masses and scrambling to find new ways to recruit followers on the quest. You’re simply not a good person or social warrior if you don’t pick up your sword of hate and follow me.

Hate is a comfortable vice. We often wrap ourselves in it and get so comfortable that we mistake it for security. It is not. It carries with it a disease that spreads so rapidly it becomes the standard rather than the exception. We are living in a culture of hate and the only way to stop the spread is to become aware of where it lies within ourselves, hold ourselves accountable, and actively work to adopt better attitudes and behavior towards dissent. Dissent is a naturally occurring event and one that can be quite useful when applied with civility and respect. However, this is where we are failing in droves. Instead of finding constructive ways to deal with dissent so we may become more tolerant, we are simply choosing to become more judgmental and angry. We are unwavering in our hate for opposing views...or people unlike ourselves.

More specifically, my writing is currently spurred by the horrific acts we continue to see against our black community. Having been raised in the south, I’m grotesquely aware of the racism that still exists in society and I cannot fathom or stomach the fear that my black friends and their families live with every day. And I feel hopeless and paralyzed in my ability to help other than to lay down these words and hope they take hold in someone’s heart.

I’ve heard countless rants from the white community that we should move on from past injustices because after all, none of today’s individuals experienced slavery themselves, so what’s the problem? I mean, I didn’t own any slaves so why should I have to pay for this? We should all move on because the field is level now, thanks to the Civil Rights Act, right?

The answer, of course, is a resounding and thunderous NO. It’s no because hate lives on and while I agree everyone and anyone should work past hate and move forward, I can imagine it is very difficult when hate stalks you and your children in the supermarket, in your car, or even walking down your own street. It seeks you no matter if you’re rich or poor, fat or thin, tall or short, smart or dumb, breaking the law…or following the rules. It seeks you anyway. There is no refuge for you.


Until the white community can effectively and passionately police ourselves and our own behaviors and actions, I expect and understand the fear for black lives. I understand that many blacks can only lay down their fear when the white community can demonstrate the willingness and desire to vehemently demand justice for all human beings. This is plainly and repeatedly not happening. We must adamantly demand better from ourselves first so we can raise the bar for our society at large.Do not accept hate from your own lips and stop harboring those that do either through actions or words. 

Perhaps you’ve even shed your own tears about the racial injustices happening around us, but if you detest that kind of hate and spew your own flavor elsewhere – YOU are also part of the problem. The problem of hate isn’t unique to crimes against the black community. It is possibly one of the larger manifestations that most of us can agree is wrong, so we like to linger on that topic and feel better about ourselves for actively mourning each victim through ribbons, walks or other passing fancies. We should definitely and deeply mourn the victims – but we should also mourn what is happening in our own hearts. We are normalizing and justifying hate everywhere.

The same people I see condemning racial hate crimes are also continuing to commit hate crimes of their own via their social media posts and conversations EVERY SINGLE DAY. I see it. I hear it. I can’t Unfollow or Unfriend fast enough and I fear before long my social media feed will only consist of advertisements and cat videos because hate is spreading far faster and killing more souls that COVID can ever hope.

I will say again, STOP THE HATE. But to stop it, you must be able to recognize it long before it grows so large it overpowers us all. Stop it in your homes, stop it from your friends, stop it in your workplaces, and most importantly, stop it in your heart. See the souls behind the eyes and realize that for every person you ridicule, roast, or condemn, you make the beast that much larger. I know I have my own work to do, so I will begin now. I hope you will too. 

Stop it everywhere. Please.





Friday, May 8, 2020

No, I'm Not Running 2.23 Miles Today


I will not be running 2.23 miles today in honor of Ahmaud Arbery. Not because I don’t abhor the fact these crimes continue to occur, but to me, it feels intensely too small and convenient. If I run my 2.23 miles and make my obligatory social media post, it may help show the world that I care about this tragedy and put me on the bandwagon of outraged citizens, but in reality, it does nothing to help change the climate or make any impact in bringing these issues out of the shadows and into the light. It merely makes us feel better but will likely not stop the next hateful murder from happening. To me, it likens to “thoughts and prayers” after every school shooting that occurs. When will real change happen and how? When the media frenzy dies down and another headline takes over, will we forget the importance of this event and make legitimate efforts to end this cycle of hatred?

The only answer in my mind comes down to daily, individual accountability. It is every single one of us making a conscious effort to police our own thoughts and actions, not shy away from conversations on the topic, and challenging those who espouse hateful beliefs in seemingly innocuous daily conversation. It cannot be through angry attacks or accusations, or through witch hunts for those we believe to be offensive, but rather through intelligent, thought provoking and inquisitive measures to determine where these ideas begin so we can better determine how to head them off. It can only be mitigated through a sincere desire to be better people, and that appears to be a huge ask if we don’t all have the emotional intelligence and introspect to take a deep look at ourselves, our peers, our family members, and friends with real desire for change. You can’t always change people’s opinions, but you can model compassion, curiosity, acceptance, and civil dialogue. I know it sounds great in theory, but harder to enact. Even I will admit I have watched or heard racism in action and choose to take the easier road of avoidance rather than attempt to engage in debate or challenge those with hateful words or actions. In that way, I was part of the problem.

I was raised in the south and have witnessed racism firsthand more times than I can count – even from my own family members. It is real and it runs deep through the veins of the soul. It has no apparent logic, but there is passion and hatred on both sides of the coin – some real, and some manufactured by loose explanations and generations of molded thoughts and feelings. In fact, all of my children were born in the south and before they started school, I decided that I did not want them raised in that kind of toxic environment which would lead them to believe those racist attitudes were appropriate or normal. I chose to avoid it. I never challenged my family or my friends. We moved to Colorado when my oldest child turned five years old and while there are issues of racism everywhere, I am happy that it is not to the extent of what I remember from my own childhood. I am happy that my children don’t understand the illogical hatred of others based on their skin. They know those feelings exist and they dismiss them accordingly when they hear them from others. My daughter is brave enough to challenge hateful words, but my boys are much quieter. However, I am satisfied that all my children recognize compassion and acceptance as desirable traits in themselves and their peers.

I definitely understand the fear black mothers share regarding how their sons will be treated and the exceptional risks they experience every day just for being themselves. That said, there are so many other injustices and fears out there that disturb me as well. I fear for my own daughter’s safety in a world that accepts and embraces sexual predators as long as they clean up nice for society. I fear for my gay friends and whether or not they will also experience violence or mistreatment for being themselves. I am angry about all of this nonsensical hate but if I dwell on that every day, the hate in turn swallows my own soul. The only way I know to fight the injustice that befell Ahmaud Arbery is to fight hate in general through my own daily actions and words. That means EVERY DAY choosing a positive outlet over hate of any kind. It’s hard. It requires work and personal accountability. Every day it requires being a good person, finding it in others, and compassionately challenging anyone who might stray off the path of tolerance and respect. It means honestly policing myself for anger and finding positive ways to channel that energy. Running 2.23 for Ahmaud is a healthy way to channel anger but please don’t convince yourself that it will move the ball forward effectively in ending this kind of treatment toward others.

We must become stronger together by asking more of ourselves and those around us. Be kind, be compassionate, be respectful, and don’t let that goal get lost in the headline of the week. Let anger spark positive action in ways that run much deeper than a daily post or symbol of support. Don’t just be a supporter, be a solution.

Thursday, April 6, 2017

The Water Boy's Farewell

Flight School, 1994
Tomorrow is my last day in a military uniform.

Strangely, it all really started with a green hat in 1994. Not the camouflage type I'd worn for most of my childhood and college days, but rather a bold, solid green hat adorned with beautiful, fresh white wings and a shiny gold bar that beamed with excitement and possibility. I was commissioned into the US Army in 1993 and soon sent to flight school at Fort Rucker, Alabama where I would become an aviator and go on to spend a few adventurous years flying the UH-60 Blackhawk helicopter. Those days were fun, speckled with angst, yet full of youthful bravery and determination.
Commissioning day at UGA.
August 20, 1993

Those days also almost never happened since I had been a drama major my first year of college and actually had my heart set on becoming an actress. However, as I quickly ran out of the small pot of scholarship money I'd earned, I ended up scrambling for Plan B. You see, my parents couldn't afford for me to stay at the University of Georgia and informed me I'd have to come home to finish school in North Carolina, where my father was currently stationed. Having had a full year's taste of freedom on my own, I was absolutely desperate to avoid this fate. As a result, I fell back on the only thing I'd known my entire life, which was the US Army. I'd grown up an Army brat and for probably the first ten years of my life didn't realize that there actually was any other profession in the world. I applied for and was promptly awarded an Army ROTC scholarship and thus began my 24-year military journey.

Learning to fly on a UH-1 Huey
Fort Rucker, AL
While I started out with vastly different goals for my military career, my life changed dramatically in 2000 when my son was born. I knew then that my focus would never be the same. I struggled daily with the decision to remain on active duty but was further challenged after my daughter was born on September 5, 2001. Six days later, as I was released from the hospital and adjusting to caring for two young children, I watched the twin towers fall. After working through the horrific grief of that day, it became painfully obvious that if I remained on active duty as a helicopter pilot, I would soon be asked to leave my children and go to war. This was not something for which I had planned when I accepted my commission. Back then, I was convinced I would never have children and was prepared to fight whenever or wherever I was needed. But, as life tends to throw you curves, somewhere along the way that plan veered dramatically off course. After giving birth, I no longer felt like the warrior I'd planned to be. I felt far more like a mother and that single responsibility instantly defined me more than any other aspect of my past. I wanted to be with my children above any and all other things.

The choice I made on that day is a pivotal part of my service that continues to define me and sometimes challenges the way in which I see myself to this day. While the nation rightfully admires the hordes of Americans who were running to join the service at that time and fight for our country, I was actually running for the door. Some would say I contradict the nature of selfless service but I've always seen it as a different kind of selflessness -- the kind that chose to care for my children first. I have the utmost respect for women who've painfully served apart from their children, but that choice was not one that I was ever personally able or willing to make. Perhaps that's my own way of defending my cowardice, but if you asked me if I'd make that same choice again, I would tell you that I would. Every. Single. Time.
My true passion -- these three babies

After my daughter was born, I transitioned into the Army National Guard, had my younger son, and spent several subsequent years teaching and commanding at the Georgia and later, Colorado Army National Guard Officer Candidate School. I've continued to change so much from the young college student pinning on second lieutenant bars to the seasoned mother of three occasionally sporting a glistening silver leaf. I've changed homesteads, husbands and even my branch of service along the way. I stopped wearing Army green in 2008 and proudly adopted the Air Force blue when I transitioned again into the Air Force Reserve. Somewhere along the way I jumped out of airplanes, fought fires from the air, jammed satellites and even helped redesign Santa's annual route! I raised my children, climbed mountains, taught soldiers and airmen, honed my strategy and planning skills, all the while watching so many of my friends and family march to war. Some of those brave service members lost their friends, some lost their spouses, and some even lost their own lives. From the sidelines, I watched intently and cried for them all. So you see, when someone thanks me for my service, it always makes me cringe. It feels a bit like congratulating the water boy for the Superbowl victory.

Based on my choices, I've never felt like a true military hero, because quite frankly, I am not. I know what those heroes are like because I've had the honor of standing beside so many over the last 24 years. I am incredibly humbled by their service and thankful to have carried the water while they carried the ball to victory. The credit goes to those warriors who bravely represent our country and taught me about commitment, compassion, determination and leadership. I am proud of my team. My success is possible due to the coattails of so many amazing leaders and role models that I've had along the way. There is a long list of officers and an even longer list of senior NCOs who have shaped my life and made me not only a better officer, but a better person as a whole. They were firm and demanding, yet patient and somehow confident in my abilities on days when I most definitely failed. It is those lessons I will cherish and remember as I continue on my journey, and lessons I wouldn't trade for all the money in the world. I could not be prouder to have been in their midst.
Grand Marshall of the 2017 Veteran's Day Parade

My retirement will be quiet and uneventful, much like the years I spent in both green and blue. It will be spent surrounded with family and friends and less of a celebration about anything that I've accomplished rather than a chance to express my tremendous gratitude for those who've been there along the way, touched my life for the better, and taught me lessons for which I'll never be able to repay. I will not wear the uniform again, but I take with me everything that it poured into my soul. Thanks to all of you and may we all find that purpose and meaning in our lives that propels us forward and leads us on the path to fulfillment.


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

Open Letter from a Step-mother


I get that you hate me. I understand that I represent a solid end to your relationship with my husband and a happy new marriage is probably light years away from the ass-kicking dose of karma you still dream he will receive. However, you should know that I wasn’t a part of your relationship or its subsequent failure and therefore I am not an appropriate target for your hate.

I get that you hate me raising your child. Having children of my own, I fully understand the way it might turn your stomach to see pictures of our new family smiling and enjoying outings of which you are no longer a part. I, too, understand the unimaginable pain of watching your child leave your home for many days or weeks at a time to visit the other parent. I am keenly aware of the tremendous hole it leaves and the way your heart aches when just want to hear your child’s voice and wrap your arms around them, but cannot. You probably resent that I have that option at times when you do not, but remember that that was not my choice. We all walk paths based on the choices we have made. While I have accepted mine and the pain it sometimes brings, you will also need to accept yours. You may not have chosen to end your marriage, but a failed marriage is generally the result of a long series of choices on both sides. Yours most definitely got you where you are today, as did mine. Trust me when I say that the hate and vengeance you harbor from this experience will never bring you peace and will never allow you to heal. 
On a hike with my stepson

Rather than perpetuate another adversary in your life, you should know that if you only chose to respect my role and the positive contributions I make, things could greatly improve for everyone, and most importantly, for your child. When you deliberately insult or ignore my role, you turn your child against me and subsequently deepen the animosity my husband feels for you. You may feel a fleeting victory in your rudeness to me, but remember that my husband loves me and all you really succeed in doing is ensuring that he continues the vicious cycle of responding to you in the same rude and unproductive manner. This will never work in your favor and will never cultivate the co-parenting relationship you need to have with my husband in order to raise a healthy, well-adjusted child.

When you force your child to pick maternal loyalty, it places your child in the middle and even though your child will always choose you, it most certainly does not make you a winner in that sick game of tug-of-war. In fact, no one wins that game and only the child becomes the perpetual loser because you don’t give them permission to connect or bother to learn what I have to offer. Your child suffers because you don’t allow your child to learn resilience, compassion or empathy. You turn your child’s life into your own parental popularity contest with nothing to gain but a giant crown of hate to burden the unfortunate winner. By teaching and grooming your child to be a hateful pawn, you deny your child a valuable mentorship that could actually enhance their life far more than it could detract from yours.

By marginalizing or disrespecting my role, you also take away any reason for me to advocate on your behalf. Remember that I have my husband’s respect, his love and most importantly, his ear. There is no one better qualified or able to help your cause than me. Getting you an extra hour, day or even a week with your child is well within my persuasive ability. I can greatly influence his response to issues regarding child support, parenting time as well as any school or holiday events. I can choose to be your greatest ally or most formidable foe based on how you choose to treat me.

My hope is that one day you will see that our new family provides much of the stability and consistency for your child that your disintegrating marriage could never produce. I wish you could see that our marital happiness is not your cross to bear but rather a gift to your child because after all, this has never been about you.  Your child has much to learn by living in a loving, caring environment where partners respect each other and work together to achieve their goals. I wish you could see that without all three of us working together, your child is unlikely to heal or thrive. Your child will continue to walk the hateful and defiant path you cultivate and in the end, they will be the biggest loser of all.

I say these things not because I take pleasure in your flaws or your pain, and certainly not to beg for your cooperation. Your choices are always yours to make and your child will also have to learn to survive with your choices. However, I continually look back at the damage and wreckage in your wake perhaps for no other reason than to remember that if my own children should ever be lucky enough to have a step-mother, I will read this blog and smile. I know that she will be my friend because my kids don’t deserve that kind of conflict and most importantly, because I want them to grow up learning to choose love before hate.

Monday, November 17, 2014

Damn Skippy We Won...Now Get Your Turd Out of my Punch Bowl!


After 23 years of lacing up my shoes, I can finally admit that I really do love running. I love what it does for my body and mind, but most importantly, I love the running community. It is comprised of people from all walks of life, all shapes and sizes and all levels of ability. They all come together in the form of training or races to laugh, joke and encourage - sharing both misery and success along the way.
I’ve never taken myself very seriously on my runs, even when I was able to pull off sub-8 minute miles. I’ve stopped for beers, a sandwich and even a couple of yard sales during my races. I’ve worn costumes, wigs, umbrella hats and trucker apparel at various events over the years. I always have fun and I know that if I show up happy and ready to run, at least some of that enthusiasm is going to brush off on someone else and the more happy people on the course, the better the world becomes. I suppose I believe that through running, I am spreading the gospel of happiness and giving back to the world – and that, in turn, makes ME happy.
Yesterday, my team won the local Fall Series for the second year in a row. For those who don’t know, there is no limit to the number of team members, but only the top three scores count for each race. As such, I am particularly proud of this series since my time actually counted for three of the four races – keeping in mind that I was wearing a keg costume for one of those races.
Mind you, I am NOT a fast runner and my time only counted because we had a teammate absent for three of the races.  Still, I kept on smiling and running, continuing to fight for a mid-pack finish each time. I feel like I put in my miles and some good effort and am rightly proud of my accomplishment. I had loads of fun as the stack of running, smiling photos can attest.
However, while still trying to catch my breath at the finish, I was immediately confronted by a member of the second place team who notified me that my team won (I had no idea as I was still trying to breathe and really wanted some water) and stated that our team win is “unfair” because she believes at least one of my teammates is “elite.” I’d heard this accusation from her before and tried to ignore the ugliness and spite, but no one likes a turd in their punch bowl.  This time, I was angry, offended and sad for her at the same time.

(The truth is that the results of the Series were so close that had the second place team simply run on average six seconds faster per mile, they could have won themselves.  Sounds like good competition to me and far from an “elite” team that ran away with the Series.)
Sadly, it was disappointing to see that someone truly missed all the best parts about running that I’ve come to love. I have a ridiculous collection of ribbons, trophies and finishers medals stacking up in my house. Some mean more than others not because of where I finished but simply because I did. They are happy reminders of my training, my travels and the friendships I made along the way. I’m reminded of the incredible volunteers and race directors that spent their time allowing me to show up and enjoy a good run. The cheering, the cow bells and the wonderful water stops along the way where there’s always a kind word for you, no matter where you are in the pack. I’m reminded of all the uplifting words that keep you going on the days when you really want to puke, give up or both.  Those medals mean nothing to me without the camaraderie and solidarity I experience when I run. 
My Fall Series teammates truly are the best and it has nothing to do with their finish times. They are good people who inspire and accept others no matter what your pace may be. I love my team not because we won, but because they make me a better, healthier person and they challenge me in ways I would never challenge myself. They inspired me to run my very first ultra race this fall, where I learned how much my body and mind are truly capable of delivering. I’ve shared happiness, frustration, sadness, elation, fears and beers with them all. When I’ve had a rough week, I still can’t help but smile when I see them at the start line. It means everything to me because when you run with your friends, you understand that simply making it to the race at all is sometimes a momentous feat, given all that life throws your way.
I know that they all have busy lives and spent the earlier part of the week juggling families, work, relationships and personal demons, just like everyone else. But on race day – the world stops for a brief moment and we make time for each and take joy in each other’s company. What draws us together is the shared journey and support we give each other along the way. We come together on race day and show support not only on the running trail, but for life itself. We are stronger together because we encourage, reassure, cheer and affirm each other’s success. We share hobbies, pet peeves, and a deep love for animals and good beer. We are friends before runners.

Success comes in various forms and I’d have to say that our biggest success this year is not the Fall Series but rather the friendships we have formed. I couldn’t care less about a medal or trophy at the end of the season. In fact, if anyone else wants them, I will gladly give them up because when I was told at the finish line that we won, my true response should have been – “In more ways than you will ever know.”