When I was a young woman, I didn't like myself, or my personality. I always wanted to be a better person, less impatient, less angry, less judgemental, and less impulsive. Turns out that these are all part of who I am and all part of ADHD.
I'm in my sixties now and I have mellowed. I also understand ADHD much better and what happens when I become overstimulated, or too hungry, and now I try to take steps to fix that before all hell breaks loose. I'm also trying to teach Jack that as well, but it's hard because he's so much like me. I'm much kinder to myself now, which is good, and I want Jack to be kind to himself as well. It's not easy because sometimes I feel too broken to be of much help to him, but I try.
I think the best thing about getting older, is this acceptance of myself, including my flaws. I will never be as patient as some people (my husband), but I can see both sides of an argument. I will never stop being impulsive, but I have learned to think things through, and I've also lived long enough now to know how things work out. It's not my first time, or even my fifth time around the track. I know what will happen with certain actions because I've already done it, or seen someone else try something and fail.
I'm still judgemental which is something I struggle with but sometimes judgement is required. It's funny, judgement is okay, but judgemental is not okay. Like anything, too much is not usually a good thing.
I have a strong sense of responsibility (raising my grandson) but I'm also resentful at times that I'm raising my grandson. This causes me some cognitive dissonance and now that I know what cognitive dissonance is, I can address it. I believe Jack is our responsibility but I often chafe against the restraints of raising a six year old in my sixties. I felt the same way about Katie, and god knows Katie had a huge hand in shaping who I am today. On the upside, I'm still playing soccer in my sixties, so there's that:) They are both my hard gifts.
I think what I like best about myself, is my sense of humour. Yesterday I had to take Katie to see her doctor for her annual physical which is always an ordeal. The receptionist and I were trying to get Katie to stand up straight so the receptionist could measure Katie's height. We were all three of us in a tight corner and the receptionist is an old lady, who is also very short. As we're trying to get Katie to cooperate, because she doesn't understand what we want, Katie leans forward and kiss the receptionist on the cheek. I started laughing and I have a loud laugh. Everybody was kind of chuckling by the end of it, and the doctor also got a hug and a kiss. Miss Katie also has an excellent sense of humour, her favorite thing, swear words, they make her laugh, which makes me laugh. We're quite the pair.
Laughter is always the best medicine, as they say!
ReplyDeleteLaughter is the best medicine, even dark humour:)
DeleteRaising kids at any age is hard work. It was for me, anyway. Once when I said I was at the end of my rope, my former husband said "Get some more rope." It was the only possible advice, really! Hard work, because you're always on-call, but so enriching.
ReplyDeleteI find myself ambivalent about so many things in my life, things (and people? sometimes) that I love and hate at the same time. I'm working at just letting that be the way it is. Unfortunately it keeps things from being black and white, so decisions are harder to make and actions are harder to take. Just call me the Grey Lady.
The beauty of reaching our great age is that we start figuring out it's okay to be the way we are. We don't have to keep improving ourselves unless it truly makes us more content to do so.
Lately I've made a change in my habits because the habit was something I always blamed for a certain condition in my life. Now I discover the habit was not at all to blame. I was! And I think I'm A-OK anyway.
And so are you, Missy. Right now you have a lot heavier challenges than I do, and you impress me with your handling of it all.
I always thought my house would be clean and the bathrooms clean when I retired. Turns out it wasn't work stopping me from cleaning, I hate cleaning, especially bathrooms.
DeleteI feel ambivalent about Jack's grandma. In some ways I admire her and in some ways I think she is just selfish. To be fair, she never wanted to raise a grandchild and has said so on more than one occasion. She's not going to change, and neither am I.
I'd like you to credit yourself with doing a wonderful job with everyone in your life. Because you are.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I try to keep learning though because when you know better, you do better.
DeleteI love this post and the way you've analyzed how what we considered negative in the past can have positives. I like that it's OK to have cognitive dissonance about many things. I will love my new grandson but I hate that my YD is having him to start with. I feel guilty about that yet it's also NORMAL. My son-in-law struggles with ADHD and I have to explain to John that he's the way he is partly because of that. I told him the other day that he wouldn't want his granddaughter judged harshly for being autistic, so it isn't fair for him (or his daughter more specifically) to judge my SIL for his ADHD. That shut him up.
ReplyDeleteGood on you for saying that to John. I need to do more research on cognitive dissonance and how to deal with it, maybe that will help.
DeleteStill playing soccer!!! So many sides to your insightful self.
ReplyDeleteLove the white pelican. Did not know they live near you.
We have six pelicans that come every summer and Lac La Biche, further north, has a huge pelican population every summer.
DeleteThis really is a beautiful post. I love how you are able to step back and see who you are and how you've changed and also come to cherish traits and observe how they have served you. I agree with Boud, though, sister. You don't give yourself nearly enough credit and I wish you could learn to do that. No matter how well we do the things we do there are always going to be days when we feel like complete failures and those are the days we pick and pick at ourselves like picking at a tiny flaw in a beautiful sweater until we've created a real hole in it. Why do we do this to ourselves? We all need to learn to stop when we're having these negative thoughts about ourselves and ask ourselves why we feel we need to do that. At least that's what I think. No one on this earth is perfect nor ever has been. Why in the world would we expect ourselves to be?
ReplyDeleteI am far from perfect, but I do want to do a better job with Jack than the job I did with my own children. Everything I learn helps me too. Katie taught me patience and empathy. Jack is teaching me to be more patient and to pay attention better.
DeleteI love this post! The trip to the doctor was heartwarming. ❤️
ReplyDeleteKatie was so gentle when she kissed the receptionist. It was lovely.
DeleteYou have great insight but are still a tad too harsh on yourself. OK. A lot too harsh on yourself! Ease up and be proud of the amazing person you are and the awesome job you are doing raising Jack.
ReplyDeletePelicans always make the day better.
Jack is a very difficult child to raise because he's smart and stubborn. He's kind of like me and my hubby:)
DeleteI am so impressed that you play soccer. When I was a kid, no one played soccer. With my lack of eye/hand coordination, most sports were beyond me. Then I got the bicycle, which truly was a gift. It's totally understandable that you chafe at this responsibility that was thrust upon you. But, you show up and do the work.
ReplyDeleteI only played soccer at recess but I loved it. I still enjoy it, except for that one fall, now I am more careful but it's probably good for my brain to get the exercise too.
DeleteYour photo is gorgeous. I am also in my 60s...68, actually. Please don't be too hard on yourself. The way I see it, we are all a work in progress. Very insightful and inspiring post. Warm greetings from Montreal, Canada ❤️ 🇨🇦
ReplyDeleteI agree, all of us are works in progress. I forgot to mention how impatient I am:)
DeleteA well-placed swear word can fix anything.
ReplyDeleteI fucking agree!
DeleteWhat Boud said. Aging does allow you to accept yourself I think. I have also mellowed. Probably because I ca. I think I once needed those hard edges.
ReplyDeleteI thought I was crazy for much of my life, turns out, not crazy, just ADHD. Of course my ex husband had me convinced I was crazy too, dick. Now I am what I am. Take it or leave it.
DeleteI think it's great that you've got such a healthy perspective on your personality and the issues that you struggle with in life. Who wouldn't be resentful at having to raise another child unexpectedly? It makes perfect sense. But I'm glad you can also see the positives and how it's benefiting Jack.
ReplyDeleteI can do hard things but I don't always want to do hard things:) I'm much stronger than my ex husband thought I was, and much stronger than I thought I was. I also love learning new things. I try new things, if it works, great. If it doesn't I don't beat myself anymore. I tried.
DeleteQuestion: Why Katie's height? What medical reason?
ReplyDeleteWhat you wrote here resonates A Lot. I used to be over critical, always played the sarcastic, sharp feminist card until I met a woman, a colleague who remained polite and kind and interested in the toughest, most controversial situations and just working alongside her taught me so much about kindness towards others and myself. Today I sat in a cafe wanting to order coffee and the two snotty waitresses were chatting and seemingly ignoring me and I was ready to get up and complain or walk out making a scene and then came to my senses and smiled at them and one came over and apologised, said she tried but could not cut her colleague short because of what she told her about her kid and bedtime and suddenly we were all comparing notes and there was laughter involved.
I was very sarcastic as well, it's a hard habit to break. I had an art teacher about twenty years ago who was so kind as well. I went to pour the dirty paint water down the sink and she said, "We can't do that, the paint water has to go down this sink." I said, "Sorry" and she replied, "How could you know?". She was just a gentle, kind woman. I've used that phrase a lot in teaching people since then, it's a much kinder way of correcting someone. How could you know?
DeleteKatie's height? It was for her physical check up, height and weight. It was like wrangling an octopus onto a scale:)
If you WANT to be a better person
ReplyDeleteYou ARE a better person
It’s as simple as that
I lost my shit yesterday with an entitled middle aged woman and reinforced in me the need for more practice at not losing my shit:)
DeleteYour post have given me much food for thought in my life. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome Jeanie.
DeleteYour post resonated with me because I never really liked myself either. As I've gotten older, I have learned to accept myself for who I am, flaws and all. And John has it right, if you want to be a better person, then you already are a better person.
ReplyDeleteI struggle with my temper, always.
DeleteI seem to be enhancing my sentences quite often anymore! I blame the Orange Bastard for that! LOL
ReplyDeleteI was enhancing my sentences yesterday afternoon quite loudly across the soccer field as her off leash dog attacked my dog who was on a leash. Her reasoning? She played soccer there sometimes. WTF!
DeleteThis was a great exercise in self-analysis and you didn't even have to chop bits off yourself and stick them in test tubes or study them under a microscope. We never stop getting to know ourselves... or indeed judging ourselves!
ReplyDeleteI think we should keep on examing ourselves right up until death. We can always learn new things, new ways of being.
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