Innovation and Power Meet Passion
Mary Kathryn Johnson
  • Home
  • Mary's Blog
  • Books
    • Say Bump
    • The Ones We Carry
  • Writers I Follow
  • About
  • Contact

It Comes in Waves

7/13/2012

7 Comments

 
My Boys at Sunset
You probably don't see it, because neither do I.  It's just beyond the horizon, just out of sight. That experience we've never had before...do we really want to see it before it gets here?  Do we want to be forewarned in time to prepare?

Both my sons (as well as their parents) will have that experience this fall.  One is going to high school, and the other is starting middle school.  Just like everything else in life, there are benefits and drawbacks to knowing, or not knowing what's coming.

My high schooler has no idea what his new adventure will bring, because he has no friends already traveling the path to guide him.  The campus is huge, and scary, just like the seniors.  Luckily, he will play trumpet in Marching Band, so he is being exposed to the campus and some of it's inhabitants before school starts in preparation for the upcoming Football season.  He is still very nervous. 

My middle schooler has an even better idea what awaits.  You see, his big brother had already been to his middle school, and we have toured the campus throughout three years of Orientations, Back to School Nights, Open Houses and Band Concerts.  The Music Director already has a spot for him in the Trombone section, and his Principal was the Vice Principal in his Elementary School until 3 years ago.  He is still scared.

Inherent personality probably plays the largest part in how we anticipate a new adventure or a fork in the road in our current one.  My oldest is a "glass half full" kind of guy, so he is a little more optimistic about what awaits him, and being tall for his age, he feels a little more secure in the way he will carry himself at the start of this new journey.  My youngest is a "glass half empty" kind of guy, so even though he knows most of what awaits him, he is concentrating on what he doesn't know, and since this pessimism creates some difficulties when making new friends, those fears are maximized.

Sometimes it's better not knowing what awaits, because we have an opportunity to bring a more positive outlook to new situations, however, the blind polly-anna may be blind-sided.  Sometimes it's worse knowing what's around a corner, because we spend time anxiously anticipating the negatives, but the pessimist can also be pleasantly surprised when it's not so bad after all.

Even a detour in the road on the way to the grocery store can bring about these optimistic or pessimistic attitudes, so you don't need offspring to relate.

The picture above shows us watching the sunset last night, the three of us and the pups (poor dad is home working) with the entire beach to ourselves.  At that moment, I knew we would all handle whatever happens...just like the waves.

Which do you prefer, knowing what awaits, or taking it as it comes?

Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
MommyLoves to Chat!
Everything MommyLoves
Say Bump and Take a Left


7 Comments

My Pixel Pals

7/9/2012

5 Comments

 
Bert Carson
Bert likes to run at night. 

He has shared his observations of people and places collected over a lifetime of his body and soul exercise with me, and I savor every post.  My pixel sense of Bert is that he is a straight shooter, and he quietly, but firmly tells it like it is...except, he yells in this post.

Bert's blogging and writing wisdom, collected over a lifetime of growing into his Vietnam experiences quiets me at times, and resonates - the machine gun fire becoming the staccato of my cello.  Even though my consciousness didn't start until his was about 20, I hear, understand and share the journey of all who participate, rather than simply observe this life, including Bert. 

I dare you to read any of his stories that relate running to writing and not nod your head and smile with understanding whether you are a runner or a writer or neither.  Bert was one of the first friends I made over pixels when I started blogging seriously.  I don't remember exactly how I met Bert, but I do remember that I instantly trusted him and his words.  (Wait...now I remember...I commented on a few of his blogposts, and he returned the favor, then invited me to join his Tribe!)

He's got a couple of books coming out soon that you might want to check out, and his blogs here, here and here are not to be missed!  He is an amazing Triberr contributor and here is his Twitter handle.

I am so amazed with the people I have met over my few years writing that I had to share.  Many more profiles to come, and Jo, my friend, you are next!

Thanks for reading!

Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
MommyLoves to Chat!
Everything MommyLoves
Say Bump and Take a Left

5 Comments

Say Bump 4

2/27/2012

2 Comments

 
Say Bump and Take a Left by Mary Kathryn Johnson
[Fourth installment  - Here's the 1st, 2nd and 3rd- of my 8 months pregnant with 2 broken legs journey as chronicled in my book Say Bump and Take a Left, How I Birthed a Baby and a Business after a Huge Bump in the Road.]

Chapter 2
Incontinence and a Walker

I have learned a few things about myself in the 40+ years I have lived.  I happily admit to being stubborn, impatient and fiercely independent.  All three of these characteristics were the result of my innate personality and living with my controlling father for the first 18 years of my life - another story that has been lived and retold by countless others.  Now, I was faced with the inability to move without assistance.  Two of those three character flaws I just mentioned had to be abandoned.  A myth told by Joseph Campbell that kept ringing in my ears goes something like, “Be careful when casting out your demons, lest you cast out the best part of yourself.”  So, my stubbornness I clung to. 

I was actually very lucky in that I had a walking cast on my right leg which allowed me to stand flamingo-like on that leg.  How appropriate that this was the leg with my pink cast.  I would not put any of my considerable weight on my left ankle however - thinking about “surgery” while pregnant had me following the Doctor’s orders like a Star Wars Clone. 

How did I get around you ask?   A wheel chair was the first option, until I pictured the walls of my house being demolished and said, “No Thanks, what else?”  We lived in a 1600 square foot tract home with a standard hallway connecting the bedrooms and garage to the front rooms and kitchen.  Our home had a typical 3 bedroom/2 bath floor plan fit into a neat little box shape with no room for grand hallways and entrances.  We have since remodeled and removed the hallway to open the house entirely.  A day late and two casts short, as they say, but nice all the same.

Next I was offered crutches. 

PLEASE, PEOPLE!  Being off balance with this big bump in front of me was the cause of the accident in the first place!  What, you want me to break my neck too?!  Instead, I was given a walker.  Yes, a walker.  You know, the things you see little old ladies using when they go out on the town.

No I didn’t put tennis balls on the bottom!

I was instructed not to “hop” when I used the walker.  I was supposed to pick up the walker while balancing on my right foot, move it forward about a foot, place it on the ground, lift the heaviest part of my leaning body off the ground using the support of my hands on the sides of the walker, swing my right leg forward into the open end of the walker and gently place my right foot on the ground again to support my weight, all the while not allowing my left foot to touch the ground.  The bottom half of my body had an additional 50 pounds attached to it with my already curvy figure, the weight of the baby hotel and the casts so in essence, I became a human pendulum.  I could just see myself flat on my ass again with the first attempt.  Forget moving the walker a foot, I started with about 3”.  Several times I hit the front of the walker with my swinging right foot, and hoped like hell my arms would hold until I came to a full and complete stop.  Let’s see how strong you are when you are doing the equivalent of a push up with 50 extra pounds on your body every time you take a step.  Not hop?! Yeah, right!  If you can believe it, I actually lost weight in my eighth month of pregnancy.  There were two good reasons for this:

  1. I couldn’t readily reach food whenever the mood or craving struck, and asking my husband to do my grazing for me was just sad.
  2. Every time I did move, it was like I was attending water aerobics class minus the flowered swim caps and the water.  My breath, like my dignity escaped me in gasps. 

Do I really need to tell you how often I had to pee at this stage of pregnancy?  Add that to the fact that I now moved at turtle speed, and it was obvious that the first “hop” on the way to the bathroom was going to open the flood gates. 

So much for keeping the casts clean and dry. 

A phone call to the hospital, and I happily was introduced to a bedside commode. 

My husband also became intimately acquainted with this device when he had to empty and clean it twice a day.
On more than one occasion, I got a disgusted look from Duane as he attempted to carry, without spilling on our newly cleaned carpets, a too full commode to the toilet to dump it after a particularly productive night.  Think about it . . . you ladies who have had babies know what comes out after you deliver with an episiotomy.  My husband absolutely deserves a medal since I was still using this wonderful commode until my newborn was four weeks old!  At least I know he will take care of me in my old age.  Actually, when I’m 80 years old, soaking my teeth and forgetting his name, he might just say, “Hey Babe, I did my time 40 years ago, you’re on your own!” 

~Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
Say Bump and Take a Left
Everything MommyLoves


[Next installment tomorrow.  All interested parties meet back here to join me for some Lego play to combat depression!]

This is your new blog post. Click here and start typing, or drag in elements from the top bar.
2 Comments

Say Bump 3

2/25/2012

4 Comments

 
Say Bump and Take a Left by Mary Kathryn Johnson
[Third installment  - Here's the 1st and 2nd - of my 8 months pregnant with 2 broken legs journey as chronicled in my book Say Bump and Take a Left, How I Birthed a Baby and a Business after a Huge Bump in the Road.  And the fun continues...]

I was originally unemployed and pregnant, because in April 2001, I was laid off from my commission only Executive Recruiting job in High Tech.  I was one of those Head Hunters finding jobs for techies during the last few months of the dot com explosion.  I had also lost my previous management job early in the year 2000 to a merger between the second and third largest staffing firms in the U.S. at that time.  All in all, the 21st century was beginning with the worst year emotionally in my adult life . . . until my second son was born of course!  I thought my luck had finally changed when this innovative, barrier-breaking President of Blue Ribbon Personnel hired a 7 months pregnant woman to start the Executive Recruiting branch of her 20+ year old staffing firm.  Not only did this amazing woman hire me, but she put me on salary, AND allowed me to work part-time occasionally from home!  Going from unemployment, to commission only, to this was like winning the employment lottery, and I have remembered her treatment of me to create my own unique environment in my company!  How could I let her and the company down on my first meeting after only a month?!

Well, gravity let me down, so there you go. 

Forget emotionally, 2001 was also becoming my worst year financially, because at the time, I was the main financial support for my family.  Since my first son was born in 1998, Duane and I shared the joys of raising him.  Duane was home Monday through Thursday, and I was home Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  I have met very few couples who have taken the Mr. Mom path, and I wonder if Romeo would have?  Being Italian, I doubt it - I know, I am one.  We had used our savings during my two previous job changes, and now I was out of work again with a baby due very soon.  Disability certainly didn’t cover my mortgage (which was thankfully lower than the California average) but at least it covered the groceries.  The only logical option:  Husband works Full Time while I sit healing my bones and finishing my baking.  I kept thinking that there was some message I was missing with all the bad luck I was having with jobs, but I just couldn’t figure out what it was - I guess I was a little slow . . . again.

This amazing new employer of mine didn’t even consider firing me, thank God, they simply said I could come back as soon as I liked after I delivered the baby and my newly healed legs.  My newborn son and I both attended the company Christmas party three months later.  If you can believe it, I actually found clothing in my closet that not only fit, but coordinated beautifully with my black “walking boot”! 
In hindsight, my boss’ response to my phone call canceling that first meeting was my first taste of the sweet lemonade I had all around me in this sour situation, but at the time all I could feel was fear and depression.
The rest of that fateful evening of September 5th went by in a blur.  I was clearly in shock, and still deluding myself into believing I had just sprained my left ankle and stepped on a rock with my right foot.  I came crashing back to reality as if slapped in the face, however when the Emergency Room Doctor came into my room with my X-Rays and said in a bored voice, “Well, you did it good.  You broke them both.”  I actually think my husband still thought I was overreacting until those words were spoken. 

The Doctor proceeded to tell me that I had fractured the fifth metatarsal bone in my right foot and shattered, YES SHATTERED, the lower fibula as it goes into my left ankle joint.  I had to be reminded of these details the next day (or actually later that same day since it was already midnight), because all I really heard were the phrases, “casts on both legs up to the knee,” and “6 - 10 weeks,” and “possible surgery.” 
That last one woke me up.

“What?” I yelled in surprise.  “I’m sorry, Doctor,  but I don’t think you understand that this big bump is really a baby!”

He said something about surgery being possible when, “one is pregnant,” to which I replied “Go #@%& yourself!”, or something somewhat cleaner since my son was present.  I asked him, “Why would I accept any risks to my unborn child by consenting to surgery without a life threatening, or at least permanently disabling situation?!”   Dr. Boredom just shrugged his shoulders.  My husband quickly agreed, when he saw the look on my face, that we would talk about it tomorrow with the Orthopedic Doctor.

A technician proceeded to fit me with temporary casts and we made an appointment to return for the real things later that morning, at our first of many return trips to the hospital during the next three months.  Evan, was a real trooper!  He never fussed once, and stayed awake even in the shocked silence of the 45 minute car ride home around 1 a.m.  He will make his future wife very happy if he continues to be so intuitive to the women in his life.   She better thank me!

My first question for the Orthopedic Doctor later that morning was, “How could this happen?!  All I did was step out a front door!”

His response made total sense, but I had never heard of it having these consequences.  Apparently, there is a hormone called Relaxin that is released toward the end of the third trimester of pregnancy that is designed to soften and loosen the pelvic ligaments and cervix to prepare for labor and delivery.  This hormone is supposed to allow your pelvis to expand and stretch without breaking as the baby travels down the birth canal.
Unfortunately, this hormone circulates throughout a pregnant woman’s entire system and softens ALL ligaments.  As if to add injury to the insult of my clumsiness, when I took that step out my neighbor’s front door, my ligaments were too drunk with this hormone to do their job, and the weakest bones broke without the support of the ligaments staying tight around them.  Since I had already gained about 30 pounds during the previous 8 months, those drunk ligaments had even more weight to try and reign in. 

Why did I give in to those Starbucks Coffee Ice Cream cravings?!

The Orthopedic doctor suggested that we x-ray my left ankle again after the baby was delivered to see if the bones were healing properly, and decide then if surgery would be needed.  (Fortunately, surgery was not necessary.)  I chose pink and blue for the colors of my casts since we were still on that “road less traveled” by not finding out the sex of the baby.  At home later that morning after the permanent casts were fitted, I lay in bed still in shock.  I kept staring at these stumps covered in neon, with these 10 sausages pretending to be toes sticking out of them, and thought blithely, “Well, at least I just got my toes done.”  I couldn’t hold it in much longer.  When I was sure that my husband and son were safely on their way to the park, I let go, and cried like I haven’t cried since the first time I saw the movie Beaches.  My feeling of depression was more overwhelming than I could possibly describe.

“I can’t do this!” I kept crying in anguish.

I was angry with myself.

I felt sorry for myself.

I had literally stumbled into this horrible situation. 

Isn’t that always the way the journey begins?!

~Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
Say Bump and Take a Left
Everything MommyLoves

[Next installment tomorrow.  All interested parties meet back here to get an education on incontinence and a walker.]

4 Comments

Say Bump 2

2/24/2012

0 Comments

 
Say Bump and Take a Left by Mary Kathryn Johnson
[Second installment - Here is the First - of my 8 months pregnant with 2 broken legs journey as chronicled in my book Say Bump and Take a Left, How I Birthed a Baby and a Business after a Huge Bump in the Road.  Go ahead and laugh, you won't hurt my feelings...]

As my neighbor ran in the house to get the phone, I held myself like most little girls do when they have to go, but don’t want to stop what they are doing.  Bouncing a little on the bench, I didn’t care about decorum in front of the three unusually quite children staring at me.  I did attempt to retain some dignity when my neighbor returned with the phone, however, by quickly moving my hand up to my swollen belly.  This awkward movement was apparently not as successful as I would have liked, because she immediately asked me if I wanted a pad, “just in case?”  So much for my feeble attempt to remain dignified.

Taking deep, calming breaths, I called my husband, Duane, and tried to explain to him why he had to come home early from work.  He took this news as he takes all shocking, potentially dangerous life-changing news - with disbelief!

I know my husband’s reactions well, because during our 27 years of marriage I have given him cause to display them all.  Nothing in our lives together has taken what could be considered a “normal” path, so he should not have been surprised.  In fact, one of my favorite pieces of literature is The Road Not Taken by Robert Frost, because I consider my life’s journey to always be on the path that “was grassy and wanted wear”.  Duane describes our marriage as, “What would have happened had Romeo and Juliet lived”, but the youthful, forbidden love story has been lived and told so many times that I’ll leave it out of this one.  If we do represent the non-tragic Shakespeare, the mythical Mr. and Mrs. Montague missed an amazing adventure!

Seven years after we were married, we split up. 

Not because of any seven year itch, (although the words “seven year” and “itch” together have quite bizarre connotations), but because we went to different Universities to finish our undergraduate education.  He went off to UC Santa Barbara, and I ventured off to UC Berkeley.  We saw each other about once every 6 weeks when he flew home for a weekend.  Those weekends were intense since we passionately studied each other in addition to the books.  I would cry my eyes out Sunday night after dropping him off at the airport, and then prepare for life without him for another six weeks.  I was not your typical UC Berkeley student . . . if there is such a thing.  I was about six years older than 99% of my fellow undergrad’s, I didn’t party on weekends, I wore a wedding ring and I shaved my legs and armpits regularly.

The first frantic phone call for help Duane received from me was when we were on summer break during college in 1986.  I was privileged enough to get a ride to the ER from the local Volunteer Fire Department Ambulance for this incident.  I had sustained a concussion, many bruises and possible facial disfigurement when I was thrown from a horse, and kicked in the face by another horse during my summer job as a wrangler on a ranch in the small Northern California coastal town where we lived.  I am VERY lucky in that the only lasting effect from this particular incident is slight nerve damage on the right side of my face.  I only feel  it when I get my teeth cleaned, something I hate more than anything else in life.  I would rather experience advanced labor pains for 10 hours than walk into a dentist’s office.  But, if I want to chew anything harder than pudding for the next 30 years, I clench my bicuspids, and step into the torture chamber with my iPod connected head held high.

Speaking of labor, my first pregnancy ended at 8 weeks gestation with another frantic trip to the ER and a misdiagnosed Ectopic Pregnancy, but a miscarriage all the same.  Again, my poor husband received an unexpected phone call from me, only this time I was already in the Emergency Room.  My second pregnancy ended with another miscarriage at 12 weeks gestation almost a year to the day after my first.  I found out I was pregnant with my first son, Evan, less than three months after this pregnancy ended. (Duane says he will never trust me again when I say ‘We’re safe’!)  Every other woman in my family has had her first pregnancy before the age of 18, so I was almost convinced that since I started almost 20 years later my genetics dictated that I was too late, and my eggs and uterus gave up a long time ago.  Thank God I was wrong, and genetics didn’t dictate having kids before I was 18, family dysfunction did.  Fortunately, I could overcome generations of family dysfunction easier than genetics.

Frantic trips to the hospital during pregnancy had become a pattern, and this third pregnancy didn’t disappoint.  I went into early labor, and was hospitalized for a week on drugs to stop it.

At my 32 week OB appointment, my doctor told me that I was in active labor, and she immediately hospitalized me.  All I was feeling were period-like cramps, and with all the horror stories I had heard I thought, “This can’t be labor!”  It was, apparently, and I was unbelievably blessed that those cramps were all I felt until a month later when I was 6cm, and the Doctor broke my water to get labor moving along again.  When the real labor hit, I realized that those labor horror stories were really sugar coated fantasies designed to lure stupid naive’ first timers like me into thinking that labor couldn’t be that bad! 

That phone call to both my boss and my husband while I was drugged up to stop the labor was interesting to say the least.  My boss at the time took the news in stride - just give someone else my responsibilities.  My husband, however, went home and shoveled bark for 10 hours a day for the next four days.  He would of course visit me every morning and evening, but the way he handles stress is unique - distraction rather than food.  I was extremely hurt at first that he wasn’t tearfully wringing his hands at my bedside all day as I lay in a drugged stupor trying not to have a baby.  After all, that is what I would be doing if our roles were reversed.  (Yeah right, like he would survive morning sickness, let alone labor!)  It took me five years of sulking to realize that he did not shovel bark all day because he didn’t love me.  Quite the contrary, his bark shoveling was caused by his love for me, concern for our unborn child and his inability to control the situation and ensure our safety.  He had to take control of SOMETHING, and the 20 yards of bark he had delivered the day before I went into the hospital was going to be shoveled into submission even if it killed him.

The poor man should have been prepared for this fall when I was 8 months along with my second son given my track record during pregnancy.   Now that I write this all down, I am either extremely stupid, extremely lucky, or I’m doing penance for my youthful Juliet impression.  I bet my mother would agree with the latter.
Even though this fall down my neighbor’s front steps was scary, I was not at all alarmed about the health of the baby.  I felt no tenderness, bruising or cramping around my abdomen.  Since I knew my body very well during all my previous pregnancies, I knew that the baby was okay, and previous experience taught me that I certainly did not need an ambulance for my rapidly swelling foot and ankle.

After I had finally convinced my husband that he did indeed need to come home to take me to the ER, because I was not prone to any kind of site specific water retention that would cause only one ankle and one foot to swell to three times its usual size, I then had to call my boss and cancel my meeting.  Oh My God!  I had to call another boss!

This was actually much more difficult!  As I said, this was a new job, and I had been employed only one month.  This might be enough to instill fear for my job, but there is more.  If you have been paying attention, you have deduced that this company hired me when I was already 7 months pregnant!  The American’s with Disabilities Act aside, I held out no hope of being hired by anyone while I was so obviously pregnant that I couldn’t have hidden my huge bump with the most stealthily conceived camouflage maternity wear.

~Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom

@SayBumpandTweet
Say Bump and Take a Left
Everything MommyLoves


[Next installment tomorrow.  All interested parties meet back here to join me in some Starbucks Coffee Ice cream cravings!]

0 Comments

Say Bump 1

2/23/2012

0 Comments

 
Say Bump and Take a Left, by Mary Kathryn Johnson
[Yes this really happened to me.  I was 8 months pregnant with 2 broken legs and a toddler.  Over the next few weeks, I will blog about my journey as chronicled in my book Say Bump and Take a Left, How I Birthed a Baby and a Business after a Huge Bump in the Road.  Go ahead and laugh, you won't hurt my feelings...]

Chapter 1
The Bump
Oh My God, What Have I done?!

Would you believe that I started a business because I fell and broke both my legs while I was 8 months pregnant with my second son?  There it was, my 'aha' moment, and I didn't recognize it as such until about 2 years after it happened.  There was a lot going on at the time, so I use ignorance as my excuse.  Unfortunately, the really important moments in life take me totally by surprise, and I become a little slow on the uptake.  At least I finally realized it, and I acted on it.  That free's up a regret for some other dream I might leave on the shelf.

A great deal of skill was required for me to break both my legs at the same time.  I'd like to say this was the result of a tragic auto accident, a harrowing ski accident or simply wearing 5" heels, but I can't.  A unique series of events, which if they happened individually would not have even caused me to stumble, combined at one precise moment with my size 11 feet to change my life.

One afternoon in early September, 2001, with the sweet smell of California Indian Summer heat, my three year old son and I were invited to my neighbor's house to swim.

No, not September 11th, September 5th!  I was lying in bed with my cast clad feet propped up on a pillow on that world-changing day of 9/11!

On September 5th, two days after my 38th birthday, we left the swim date around 4 p.m. so I could get ready for an evening meeting for my new job.  I stepped out my neighbor's front door, and my little, insignificant world tumbled into chaos - literally!

Now, I had been to my neighbor's house plenty of times in the five years since we had moved to the neighborhood, but I had always entered and left either through the backyard gate or the garage door.  My neighbor had two young children at the time, a boy aged 4 and a girl aged 5, and my 3 year old Evan played with them quite often back and forth between our two houses.  He never went swimming without me, however.  Because the kids had dried off to play with a new toy in the front room, this visit was unique in that we left like actual guests - through the front door.

This was my first obstacle.

The step from the front door threshold to the cement slab porch of my neighbor's house is unusually high.  Over 9" in fact, when the local building code requires a stair riser to be no more than 7".

No, I didn't sue!

It may not seem like much, but those two extra inches made a huge difference in my landing that first step!  Have you ever taken a step down the stairs and expected the bottom to be closer than it actually was?  My stomach skipped just like my foot skipped that step!

Second obstacle - the three young children had also scrambled out the door around me.  Kids this age don't wait patiently in line to march single file out a door after a raucous day of swimming.  They are over-excited and exhausted at the same time, and not at all patient enough to wait for some pregnant old lady.

Since watching where I put my feet was almost impossible with the enormous baby hotel that had grown in front of me the previous eight months, I guess you could safely say this represented my third, and most important obstacle.

Fourth obstacle - I was wearing sandals with a hard, cork sole.

No, they didn't have a heel!

Pregnant, wearing a bathing suit AND heels?!  I'm not that stupid, or that young!  I threw away those shoes the next day!

So, when I stepped out of the door, all four of these things contributed to the fact that I was a somewhat comical, if dangerous, Weeble-like pregnant woman.

Too bad I fell down.

My first step landed on the outside of my right foot.  The sole of that sandal did not give, and allow me to somewhat gracefully correct myself.  My foot snapped sideways onto the outside.  I started to fall, and caught myself with my left foot, but stepped on the outside of that foot, too, landing on my ankle.  This time, I heard a "pop".  I proceeded to fall - not so gracefully so as to avoid taking any of the kids with me - down the remaining three cement steps, landing on my well-padded backside.  There was a full 3 seconds of shocked silence.  I dimly registered hearing a baby cry somewhere in the neighborhood.  Yes, all the spectators to this new "Mommy Tumbling" sport were staring at me with wide, shocked eyes.  I expected someone to put up their arms and yell, "GOAL!" but thankfully no one did.

My neighbor anxiously asked me, "Which one is it?" as I clutched my legs as best I could around my nearly full-term bump. 

To which I shakily replied, "Both!" 

The outside of my right foot, between my pinkie toe and my heel began to swell, as did my left ankle.  Not a good sign.  I was making a conscious effort not to cry like that distant baby so my anxious three year old wouldn't either.  I carefully scooted myself, butt first, back up the three steps, and onto a bench on the landing, where I was urgently reminded that the first thing I was going to do when I got home was head for the bathroom.

Never again will I wait until I get home!

~Mary Kathryn Johnson
Author ~ Entrepreneur ~ Mom


@SayBumpandTweet
Say Bump and Take a Left
Everything MommyLoves



[Next installment tomorrow.  All interested parties, meet back here to find out why I prefer 10 hours of hard labor to visiting the dentist.  You think I'm joking?!]


Say Bump and Take a Left, 2 broken legs and 8 months pregnant.
0 Comments

Mother Theresa was Very Selfish

9/1/2011

2 Comments

 
Heart and Mother Theresa
You may argue that I have it backwards, but I don't think so.

We are all motivated by feelings.  The Sales Person who sells shipping boxes feels just as much of a high when he makes a big sale as the one who sells Ferrari's.  The high of the sale is the motivator.  iTunes and CDBaby would not exist if Musicians simply sat in their spare rooms or studios expressing to themselves their joy of making music, but having no desire to share their compositions.  The Musician puts her work out into the world, because of the feeling she gets when someone likes her music and/or buys it.

Landscape Architects, Accountants, Artists, CEO's and School Teachers are no different.  Whatever the motivation for each person to stay in his chosen career, whether for the pride in the magazine article showcasing the outdoor beauty the Landscape Architect enhanced, or the fulfillment of knowing the School Teacher positively influenced the next generation , the feeling is the motivator.

For many of us, those strong positive feelings dull with time, repetition and added responsibility.  We acquire spouses, children, pets, boats, houses and debt, and the work that gave us powerful motivating feelings actually becomes work.  That fulfillment of teaching children now becomes a desire for the security of full pay and benefits when she turns 60.

Anyone nodding their head? 

So, do we simply deal with the drudgery for the sake of security?  If so, what life will we look back upon when we face death?  What will we regret?

Ten years ago I was in the drudgery.  I had a job I enjoyed, but I was starting to only enjoy each sale for the money it brought home for the house, cars and groceries, and to be honest I was enjoying the status that came with my upper middle class income. 

Then several things happened in September, 2001 that made me "Take a Left" turn on my path in life.  I know what you're thinking, but read on.
  • I got laid off due to a merger
  • I got another higher paying job in the booming dot com industry
  • I got pregnant with my second child
  • I lost my dot com job (surprising in 2001, right?!)
  • I got another great part time job even though I was 7 months pregnant
  • I fell and broke both my legs when I was 8 months pregnant
  • I delivered the baby with casts on both legs up to the knee, and cared for the newborn, toddler, husband and home hopping around using a walker
  • My amazing, wonderful Mother-in-law whom I had known for 30 years then died of Breast Cancer
Yes, my little insignificant difficulties were nothing to the global catastrophe that occurred only six days after I broke my legs on 9/5/01, but my difficulties are forever linked to that catastrophe as I watched with my cast-clad feet propped up on a pillow the horror of 9/11/01 unfold, and my son was also born only days later.

All of my difficulties led to my feeling very confident that if I could survive all this with my sense of humor in tact, I could do ANYTHING!

I started a business, MommyLoves, and grew it to success myself - I feel proud and empowered.

I wrote a book, Say Bump and Take a Left. How I Birthed a Baby and a Business after a Huge Bump in the Road - I feel humbled, accomplished and proud that I Self Published.

I started a Self Publishing company to help all the people who approached me about their own stories, and their desires to show them to the world through Self Publishing, HelpMeSelfPublish - I feel satisfaction and contentment that I am nurturing others to fulfill their dreams.

When you give a gift to someone - not simply a store bought card and candy for Valentine's day - a real gift that surprises and overjoys them, you feel great.  You nailed it!  You gave that one in a million gift that you knew they would love, yet were not expecting.  There is no better feeling.

Today, I helped a friend embark upon the road to a dream she never even knew she had, down a road she is uniquely qualified to navigate.  Fulfilling this dream will give her the flexibility she needs to be home with her children, and the security she desires to be self sufficient.  I didn't do anything specific, I just planted a seed, showed her a way, opened up new possibilities.  The sparkle in her eyes, and the glow of possibilities radiating from her face made me feel damn good that I contributed to that sparkle and glow!

Pretty selfish of me, right?!

I can only imagine how Mother Theresa felt when she saw that glimmer of hope in every person's eyes that she had the pleasure of helping.  Again, the feelings I get from my little insignificant contribution to my friend and the people I help Self Publish are not even comparable to the joy Mother Theresa must have felt when she knew The Society of Missionaries helped thousands of the poorest of the poor in countries around the globe, and those thousands of people would not have that glimmer of hope were it not for Mother Theresa.

Thank God Mother Theresa was so wonderfully selfish.

How selfish are you?
2 Comments

    Download my Most Powerful Tool to Get it ALL Done as a Parent & Author!

    Author

    Hi, I'm Mary, a woman constantly working toward becoming a Master of herself and all things named Duane, Evan, Riley, Seren, Linus and Katie ~ that's why it's so messy around here.


    Archives

    January 2016
    October 2013
    September 2013
    August 2013
    July 2013
    June 2013
    April 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013
    January 2013
    December 2012
    October 2012
    September 2012
    August 2012
    July 2012
    June 2012
    May 2012
    April 2012
    March 2012
    February 2012
    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    October 2011
    September 2011
    August 2011
    July 2011

    Categories

    All
    9 11
    Choices
    Communication
    Creativity
    Dad
    Do What You Love
    Dream
    Dust
    Empower
    Entrepreneur
    Every Mom
    Follow Your Bliss
    Grandparents
    Growing Up
    Growth
    Help Me Self Publish
    Holiday
    Learning From Mistakes
    Loss
    Love
    Mary Kathryn Johnson
    Michelangelo
    Mommyloves
    Mompreneur
    Mother Theresa
    Omelets
    Parenting
    Political Correctness
    Politics
    Regret
    Rhythm
    Say Bump And Take A Left
    Search Engine Optimization
    Selfish
    Self Publish
    September 11
    Summer Vacation
    Take Action
    Therapy
    Tragedy
    Triberr
    Twitter
    Wordless Wednesday
    Writing

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.