The Air of Change

I love change…when I instigate it.

I love change…when I have helped process it.

I hate change…when I have no control over it.

I hate change…when it hurts my family.

I accept change…because life would be boring without it.

I accept change…because I rely on God.

The breeze started in early April and it is still blowing. It started with little things…I need to work more, Reece needing a shift in gymnastics and possibly school, Landen moving towards independence.  And then it got bigger….Gregg got laid off, Eli left for a relative and Thea turned 1.  None of these are bad things, in fact they are all good but they are not easy.  So many times we assume change is bad but the truth is that this spring and summer has been nothing but good change.  We have all grown emotionally, spiritually and collectively as a family.

I feel change as it’s occurring.  I can sense the shift in the air.  I am not sure when my ability to sense seasons of change began.  I am not sure if this is something everyone can do or not.  For me, I observe, almost from the outside or as if i’m watching a movie in slow motion.  I am in it but i can feel it and see it.  It’s not sudden, It’s slow shifts that you never thought would come but then all of the sudden you are witnessing them.  It’s hard for me to process when it happens.  I don’t know whether to appreciate it or fight against it.

A significant wind blew on the cruise this year.  There was a shift occurring in our immediate and extended family.  We were the parents of adults, children and a grandchild.  The princess crazed kid was not so interested this year, the pre-teen was done being at the ‘kid table’.  The adult kids were focused on survival with a baby.  The baby was excited for the freedom.  I became less interested in what we were doing and more interested in who I was with.  Gregg was the most relaxed he has ever been on a cruise due to his new found freedom.  And Alex.  He participated when he could but often had to rest.  My parents focused on his care and the visible decline of his body.

That same breeze that blew through in early April and in July is still blowing.  Change is happening.  See it? Landen started 7th grade at the new building.  Reece started 4th grade at Pinkerton.  Gregg has a new gig that allows him to work from home.  Mitch and Liz have decided to move to Tulsa.  And I am in slo-mo., watching the changes that come with time, that I have no control over.

Change:

to make different from what it is or from what it would be if left alone: to transform: to exchange for something else

10 years ago, We Had No Idea

 

Ten years ago, Gregg and I lived at Shady Oaks.  We had an 11 month old daughter, a 15 year old son and a 17 year old son.  Gregg owned his own construction company.  The latest client wasn’t paying his bills and the company was going down.  I was struggling with postpartum depression (although I didn’t realize it) and an identity crisis.  And we were about to embark on a journey that would test our faith, marriage, family and core being.  It would also make us stronger individuals, strengthen our faith and cementing our family together for all times.

We had no idea.

It actually started to intensify  7 months earlier.  Chase, 15, wanted to throw an end of year party for his friends.  It had been a rough year for all of us.  He hated school.  Punishments didn’t motivate him.  Rewards didn’t motivate him.  Little did we know the path that we were all about to travel.   The party for 10-15 people grew to 50 people within minutes. Food and sodas were available, music, swimming and more.  But alcohol had been slipped into the party and within an hour, our house was trashed and Chase’s girlfriend was passed out on his bed.  And the crew of 45-50 kids departed as fast as they had come.  This was just the first sign of the trouble that was to come.

We had no idea.

Chase had always been convinced that he had ADD and needed medicine.  We thought he really just wanted a magic pill because we didn’t view him as being ADD, but after the year we had had, we decided to get him tested.  The testing did not show he was ADD but it did show he had an auditory learning challenge.  One of the recommendations was a smaller class environment.  A perfect segway to private school.  We thought it would be a good re-boot.  Chase started his sophomore year at a private school, 15 minutes away.  Landen and I were his primary ride.

We had no idea.

November 3, 2006:  Senior night at the High School football game.  Mitch was being recognized as a Silver Spur.   It was also the night of Chase’s first suicide attempt.  Chase was grounded from going to the game and was ticked.  All of Mitch’s parents were going to the halftime event.  My parents had come into take care of Landen (9 mo).  Sometime between dinner and 930 pm, pills were taken.  And by midnight we were all at the ER wondering what had just happened.

We had no idea.

Counseling was required and our next week was all about keeping Chase alive and attending out-patient therapy.  Gregg and I followed all of the counselor’s recommendations which wasn’t popular with Chase or his mom.  By Christmas, Chase was done with our rules and decided to live with his mom.  He also wasn’t speaking to Gregg.  It was a very hard Christmas to say the least.

We had no idea how hard it was about to get.

Private school got exchanged for a new public school close to Jenny (his mom).  And in January 2007, Chase started his third school in less than a year. It seemed every day, several times a day, we were on the phone with Jenny and John arguing about what was best for Chase.  And then early one morning, January 21st to be exact, we got a call.  Chase was being taken to the ER via ambulance.  It wasn’t good.  Know one knew what he had taken or how much.  Gregg headed straight to the hospital.  I, however, had 4 kids that night.  There aren’t many people you can call in the middle of the night for help but we have those people and thank God for them.  Jan and Craig got to our house around 230AM.  Jan stayed with the kids so Craig and I could go to the hospital.  It was BAD.

Chase was in a vegetative state and not able to speak.  We didn’t know how much of what he had taken.  And he was like that for 72 hours. Those next 72 hours are a blur.  We had huge decisions to make without many resources.  Once he did finally wake, he was broken. He begged for help.  He was a scared kid and we were scared adults.

We had no idea.

We learned a lot in the next week.  Like the fact that there are very few residential treatment programs that will take on a kid that have actually ‘attempted’ suicide.  Even less that aren’t sterile medical places.  That people would rather judge our parenting skills for having a kid that attempted rather than help us locate a place to help him.  That this was a taboo topic to be open about.  And many, many other things.  Chase was transferred to a the Seay Center in Plano until we could figure out what to do and to get him some interim help.  It is a lock down sterile facility.  We had 5 days to determine our next steps.

We had no idea.

Lots of phone calls and internet research.  And then we found one…in UTAH!  They were willing to work with our insurance (not that it would pay much), were more residential than sterile, they didn’t promise a miracle in 30 days and they had a spot open.  Eagle Ranch Academy.  Chase was not thrilled.  In fact, he was pretty pissed and said he wasn’t going.  So Gregg gave him the option of flying and driving peacefully with us or being transported by large bouncer dudes in a van.  Chase is smart…he chose to fly.

So on Landen’s first birthday, Gregg, Chase and I flew to Las Vegas and drove to ERA.  We toured the facility, admitted Chase to ERA and headed back home.  The tears of sadness and relief and exhaustion were constant as we drove back to Las Vegas.  To know your child is in a ‘safe’ place after months of uncertainty is more than a relief.  Gregg and I made it back to Vegas and had our best night of sleep in over a year.

We had no idea.

Chase spent 8 months at ERA.  The treatment is student driven.  And he was a tough one. There was very little communication in the first few months until he began to actually work the program. We visited a few times for family therapy and education.  In the mean time, Chase turned 16, Gregg’s business went bankrupt (and he started another business), Mitch graduated from High School and I was learning how to be a stay at home mom.

In August of 2007, Chase came home.  He had been doing school on-line in rehab and wanted to continue it at home.  It would allow him to finish HS a year early and he was finding success with the curriculum.  So we became home-schoolers.  Chase was disciplined and did his schoolwork and started earning privileges back at home.  He started dating a CHS girl and we started doing a lot of painting and photography.  And for 20 months, Chase was sober.

Then in the Fall of 2008, he disappeared during the night, drove to Colorado and began another difficult path.  He wasn’t allowed to live with us after that.  He bounced around to his mom’s house and friends houses for a while.  He lived out of his truck for a long time. And we didn’t know where he was most of the time.  We said he could visit if he was sober and we were home, but that wasn’t often.

The spring of 2010, he hit a lower level (not bottom) and was feeling suicidal again.  Gregg was working in Houston during the week.  Landen was 4 and Reece was almost 1.  The girls were at preschool and I was talking with Chase on the phone.  Then a few texts and no response.  I started driving.  All I had to go on was that the cops were there and it was somewhere in the neighborhood behind Mooyah.  I found him.  He was tired, sad  and broken.  I called Gregg, called the airline and put him on a plane to Houston.

Chase lived with Gregg for a few months.  He worked on a construction site and trying to remain sober.  Having a place to sleep, food to eat and clothes to wear allowed him to breathe a bit.  But that didn’t last long.  He got tired of the rules and the structure.  So he headed back to Coppell. I think he actually lived with Jenny for a while after that and tried the whole work, sober-ish living.  But living in someone else’s house under their rules was not his strength, so he went back to the streets.

By 2011, he had a restaurant job and was consistently working and pulling himself together.  He got an apartment with a friend and was able to pay his bills and eat.  And he started to see the value of sobriety.  He started coming around a bit and talking about wanting more in life.  By 2012, we were able to connect him with a job in the kitchen at private school with a great friend.  He did great at the routine and the job.  The people around him were supportive and encouraging.  He began to use less and work more.

I will never forget the day in the Spring of 2013, when Chase mentioned going back to school.  He had already had 2 chances at the local community college with our money and had not finished either semester.  We told him if he wanted to go back to school he would need to pay for it first and then we would re-imburse him once he completed the course with a decent grade.  He dreaded going to the community college but he wanted an education.  I challenged him to open his options up and look outside of the community college.  It blew his mind.  He had never thought of that.  He didn’t respond for a few weeks after our conversation.

Chase’s latest girlfriend was headed to SCAD in the fall of 2013.  He wanted to go as well.  He didn’t have a resume, a portfolio or a good track record at anything.  It was the first time we had seen him excited about anything in a very long time.  So we walked him thru the process of applying. It was a long shot but if he wanted to try, we would walk beside him.  It was the first time he followed through on the steps of the ‘system’.  And he was rejected, however there was one option.  He could prove himself at the university.  IF he paid full tuition AND lived in the dorms, he could attend SCAD for a quarter.  IF he made good grades, he would be admitted to the university.  We leaped.

Gregg and Chase visited the campus and fell in love with Savannah and SCAD.  And by March of 2013, I was moving Chase into his dorm at SCAD.

Chase has always been a creative and intelligent person.  He is sensitive, loving and caring.  He is considerate and kind.  He is persuasive and easily persuaded.  He looks at the world differently than most and always felt like an outsider.  He had found his place with the mis-fits, the druggies and the disadvantaged.  But this opportunity would help him find his place in academia, in creative expression and in hands on results.  It had everything he needed, academia that could relate to the artist, the intensity to demand attention and results and the hands on application to cultivate hidden talents.  It fed his self confidence, his brain, his creativity and his curiosity.

And in June of 2016, Chase graduated from SCAD with a degree in Service Design.

 

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Ten years ago, we had no idea we would ever see this moment.  We had no idea we would get the privilege of traveling this path.  We had no idea that we could or would love him even more. We had no idea how it would change our life as a family, as friends and as individuals.  We had no idea we would be so thankful.

 

Home Alone

The girls are at school. Gregg is headed to the airport. Mitch and Liz are in their new apartment for the first time last night. Chase is in Brooklyn and we don’t have a foster kid. I am officially hope alone at 8 am on a Monday.  And I am emotional.  I am intentionally trying to feel this moment.  I am not making to-do lists or cleaning, I am feeling.  And its weird.

I am intentionally taking time.  Enjoying space.  But I haven’t done it in so long it feels awkward.  This is my revelation.

I have no words of wisdom.  No epiphanies.  Just quiet and time.

‘Revelation is a terrible thing…because once you see, you cannot unseen.’

 

Big Dreams

img_0396A love of food gets passed along.  Gregg has that love of food.  It’s grown over the years from a necessity to a relaxing obsession.  Landen has acquired his taste, observance, technique and desire.

Cooking shows fill the airwaves in our home.  WE watch, critique, admire and dream.  A couple of months ago Landen found THE show that was going to highlight her dad’s impeccable cooking skills.  And so we filled out an application. What happened next has been a ride that none of us expected, especially Gregg.  Had we known the amount of time it would required for Gregg to participate in this show, we may have thought twice. Instead we risked and signed him up for the competition.  Hundreds and maybe thousands apply for this competition so why shouldn’t we sign up the best chef we know?

Phone calls, emails, Skype calls and one sliced off finger tip and HE made it on the show!  I don’t know how Gregg has felt throughout this process, but I do know that there are at least 3 girls in TX that are proud of him.  Win or lose, we are proud.  And we are hopeful and we are excited and we are in awe.  And we brag and we share and we anticipate and plan for the big trip and the big show.  And we are all in NYC.

And after a 10 hour day, it is over.img_0458

The mixture of emotions that was displayed between these girls and their father was beautiful.  Joy and pride, anticipation and excitement, disappointment and yet appreciation.  I witnessed a level playing field of humanity tonight.  No hierarchy.  Just pure human emotion surrounding the events of the last couple of months and it was beautiful.  Risking big without huge reward.  Being brave.  They know.  

A lot of life is reacting to what ‘happens’ to us or accepting the ‘consequences’ of our actions.  This is how we respond to life and this is what we teach our kids.  Today Gregg taught us all how to be brave and to risk.   How to boldly go after something that seems crazy and beyond the expected life path and he did it with humility, hard work, and an open heart.  Most of all he taught our kids how go after your dreams and I am so thankful.