Tuesday, January 27, 2026

Processing Friendship: I Forget to Respond to Texts

To begin reading this series at the beginning, click here.

To read the previous installment in this series, click here. 

 I frequently think about someone, decide to text them to check-in and then realize that they texted me days ago and I never responded. 

I feel terrible. Most of my friends are super gracious about it, but I think the issue I have with texting back probably contributes to my feeling alone. 

I love feeling connected. I love having people to laugh with, have deep conversations with, and support. 

But I have largely learned to live my life alone. I'm used to just being on my own. It's been that way my whole life. I remember my mom telling other people when I was little, how I would just play alone in my room and she hardly even knew I was there. While I was in my room playing alone, I was pretending to have relationships. 

I'm starting to realize that my family - my husband and kids - has largely operated the same way. We keep to ourselves, in the same way I keep to myself. I didn't realize I was creating a caccoon for myself, but I was. I thought that if I could parent in the right way, that I could raise a tribe for myself. I could have the kind of relationships that I crave, with my kids once they were grown.

Somewhere along the way I realized that that mentality was not healthy, and being my kids primary source of relationship was not healthy for them. I realized that I want them to develop other relationships and go out into the world so that when I'm gone, they won't be lonely. 

There is grief in letting go of that dream. For several years, I had focused on that as my only hope for the kind of relationships I crave. 

 I've let go of that dream and I'm left back at square one trying to figure out what is wrong with me and why I can't seem to form the kind of friendships I long for. 

I want the relationships but I don't have the mechanisms within myself to form them. I think it's a combination of different things: 

1. The belief that the only way people will accept me is if I take up as little space in their life as possible. This involves a lot of hiding myself and staying quiet, and telling myself that people don't want to hear from me. 

2. Fear that if I allow myself to be seen, I will be rejected. 

3. The assumption that I am not likeable that isn't cured when people tell me I am. 

 I'm not sure if these beliefs can be permanently changed. I've been trying for a long time. I don't feel like I've made progress. When I make progress, something happens to derail it, and I don't know that I am better off then I was before I made the progress. 



Monday, January 19, 2026

Examining Myself

 There are times of life that lend themselves to assessing where we are, where we've been, where we want to go and how our current routines, mindsets and trajectory support or block our goals.

My birthday is one of those times for me. I turn 44 on January 20. 

Honestly, I don't remember what my goals were when I turned 43. I'm not sure I had any beyond continuing graduate school and surviving (if the Lord was willing). 

I haven't had a lot of goals in a while because I've felt disillusioned and unsure of whether people actually change and grow. 

The last 7 years have been really hard for me, and the last year has been one of the hardest yet. Facing truths I had not previously been able to acknowledge, feeling the weight of my own shortcomings and loneliness all converged to feel like a millstone around my mental neck. 

Toward the end of 2025, I made some decisions for myself that seem to be supporting my mental health. I'm not ready to talk specifics yet (maybe not ever), but I'm feeling hopeful. 

8 years ago, I created this graphic to communicate the mission behind my goals and I think it's still the mission behind all of my goals. 

These are my goals for this year:

1. Graduate with a Master's degree in Marriage and Family Therapy.

2. Pass the test to get my Associate's license.

3. Start my career as a Marriage & Family Therapist.

4. Trust God with my identity and relationships - I will know that I am doing this by being less impacted by whether or not I am included by other people, I will initiate more within relationships, and I will be more consistent in communication. Overall, I will show up authentically in relationships and give without expecting anything in return. 

5. Designate specific spaces where my broom, mop and hairbrush belong. 

6. Take medications consistently. 

7. Be consistent with health goals. 

8. Take a vacation with Michael to celebrate our 25th anniversary. 

9. Consistently use budgeting software.

10. Be more engaged in family life. 

Saturday, January 10, 2026

Processing Friendship: Labels & Hiding

To read the previous installment, click here. 

To start from the beginning, click here. 

I was around 9 years old. My mom had a daycare, and asked her ("the swimmer") to come and supervise the daycare for a bit while my mom went to an appointment. 

As my mom left, she arrived but she didn't come into the house. She made her way into our backyard where we had a pool. She got into the pool. 

I was in the house with several babies and a few toddlers. 

I remember watching her get into the pool and being confused. She was supposed to be there to take care of these kids while my mom was gone. Honestly, maybe my mom coaxed her to come by telling her that I would do the work but that, for legal purposes, there had to be an adult present. I don't know what the arrangement was. 

What I know is that 9 year old me felt overwhelmed by the responsibility. At some point a couple of the babies began crying. As I was trying to attend to the babies, the phone rang. The swimmer yelled from the pool for me to answer the phone. I didn't feel capable of answering the phone while caring for the crying babies. 

Eventually the swimmer came into the house and demanded to know why I hadn't answered the phone. I responded curtly. 

I later learned that the swimmer had told others how "snotty" I am. I'm not defending the way I spoke to her, but it's understandable that a nine-year-old trying to hold two crying babies, care for a third baby, and watch several toddlers -- might feel overwhelmed, abandoned and angry while the adult responsible for them takes a swim and yells demands from the pool.

Snotty is a label I've worn. I thought it was mine. It was applied to me frequently. Boys in my vicinity were allowed to bully, abuse and torture me, but if I responded in any way I was labeled as "snotty" or some other name to indicate I was the problem.

Throughout my life I've worn many labels. Some have been true, and some, I have come to understand, were never mine to wear. I wasn't snotty. I wasn't the problem. I was a sweet little girl who felt overwhelmed, abandoned and worthless - and sometimes acted and spoke out of those feelings. 

As I grew, I realized that if things were going to change, I had to change them (because I was the problem, remember?). I did this by quieting myself, by making myself smaller, by conforming myself to who my labelers thought I should be. At first, I thought I was safe out of the sight and hearing of my labelers, but eventually realized that nowhere was safe.  

It was a magnificent disappearing act. I maintained the form on the outside, but all of the beautiful, colorful and spirited parts of me receded into the darkest recesses of my body. What was left was a shell, a form, an ogre whose purpose was to keep me safe, but ultimately held me prisoner. 




I Belong.

 I am two presentations away from having earned a Master's degree.  I walked into the interview day, the day that would determine whethe...