The Dark Months Cometh

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Autumn always makes me melancholy. I find I miss those I care about more this time I year; I tend to be more pessimistic than I normally am; my energy level plummets; and my social skills go into hibernation.

Unlike many people in the Northern Hemisphere, Autumn is not my favourite season. I am a spring gal. Heck, years ago when it was the ‘in’ thing to “have your colours done”, even the consultant said I was a spring gal.

Sure,  there are things I enjoy about fall. Living in the land of the midnight sun doesn’t provide much ambience on a summer’s evening. There is something ethereal about lanterns casting their glow across the footpath; candle light wafting across the faces of friends at a dinner table; the dance of a campfire flame. For any of those things to exist, you need darkness …and fall.

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One of my favourite times of day is dusk, when you walk by homes just as darkness descends. The soft light casting shadows from windows onto the lawns and gardens outside. It’s that warm, homey….melancholy feeling that wraps me in a warm embrace as I see families gather back together after a day spent apart.

I enjoy the  ‘comfort foods’ of autumn like homemade stews and soups.

But, it’s the smell of the earth…that decaying, rotted smell; the trees shedding their leaves, standing stripped naked against the storms to come. It’s getting up in the dark….difficult for a morning person. It’s the shortening of the days; it’s the weight of heavier clothes; it’s wearing socks and coats again. It’s the lethargic feeling that I can’t shake. It’s the attraction…and the fear…of aloneness that I crave.

I suffer from Seasonal Affective Disorder, or S.A.D. for short. I was diagnosed just over 20 years ago. There are varying degrees…mine is severe. S.A.D. is a type of clinically defined depression that occurs at certain times of year, mainly during winter. It can be brought on by grey cloudy days, or in my case, months of very short daylight hours and long hours of darkness. Treatments vary and can include prescription drugs and light therapy. I opt for the latter.

I struggle every day just to function. It is all I can do to pull myself out of bed, shower and brush my teeth. I would prefer to sit in a vegetative state until the warmth of the spring sun brings my body, and my spirit, back to life. I literally have to talk myself through each day.

All of this doesn’t explain my dislike of fall, as I didn’t always suffer from S.A.D. Perhaps, it is, for me, the season of death. I lost my Father in the fall. My first husband died in the fall. A dear friend, my Maid of Honour, was murdered in the fall. For me, it is the season of loss; of unplanned endings. Of great pain.  It means the darkness is coming and I never know what form that darkness will take.

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I will myself through it because as surely as I breathe, I know that spring is only six months away. It gives me strength …and hope.

If X=Y, What is a Derivative of Useless Information?

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Hooray! Another successful day,  and not once did I have to use calculus!

What is calculus you ask? Well:

cal·cu·lus
ˈkalkyələs/

“… the branch of mathematics that deals with the finding and properties of derivatives and integrals of functions, by methods originally based on the summation of infinitesimal differences. The two main types are differential calculus and integral calculus .”

I know, hey!?! Pretty darn impressive….IF you happen to  know what ‘derivatives’ ;’ integrals of functions’; and ‘infinitesimal differences’ are….I do not.

Now, to be fair,  I have used trig and geometry many times. Recently we sided our cabin with cedar shingles and given the various roof lines, all of the maths involving angles and degrees came in very handy. They made sense when I studied them, and I find practical uses for them on a regular basis. Heck, along with the basic properties of physics, I used math to become a pretty decent pool player. I tried to apply the same principals to golf but wasn’t as successful.

I use arithmetic daily. Division, multiplication, addition and subtraction…at least one of these is pulled out and dusted off whether I am calculating square feet; converting those square feet to metres;  deciding how big a roast I need to feed six; how many kilometres I got on my last tank of gas; balancing the books of my businesses. It is a knowledge worth having.

Never once since high school have I had occasion to use algebra for any practical purpose. I still question the necessity of using letters and other symbols to represent numbers – unless you are doing a cryptogram – but seriously. Why not just use the number??? If 3x=15, why not just write 3×5=15? I don’t get it. Was someone bored one day and decided to make life for high school students a hellish nightmare by coming up with these ridiculous equations?

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Until recently, I always believed that polynomials were various types of polyester fabric and an abelian was someone from Albania. The first clue for math teachers should have been that glazed look in my eye, and if they didn’t pick up on that, you’d have thought the drool running down the corner of my mouth toward my chin would have triggered a reaction….but nooooooo. No one noticed that I got lost on the road to the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus. Honestly, I don’t know how I have survived all these years, learned to sail a boat, fly a plane, read a balance sheet and time all the vegetables to be cooked at exactly the same time without any of this ‘magic’.

By the way, the only time I have ever used calculus or algebra since high school, was when I was enlisted to assist my children with their homework. I want to publicly apologize now. It was a dismal failure. Correction: I was a dismal failure.

The “F” Word

One day, when she was only five or six, my granddaughter came home and told me that a little boy at her school had said the “F” word. That got my attention! Hmmmm….how do I handle this with sensitivity, yet honestly…and how does this precious child in front of me even know the “F” word and that it’s inappropriate?

Well, I say….that wasn’t very nice and we don’t use that language do we? ‘No”, she answers seriously. “My Mum told me that it isn’t very nice to call someone fat.”

Ohhhhhhhhh, that “F” word!! What a dear child, and what a great Mum, I think to myself as I hug her tightly. If only more people knew that that particular “F” word is far more hurtful, nasty and life altering than the other could possibly be.

Me at 5 years old
Me at 5 years old

Like many other people, especially women, my whole life I have struggled with my weight. Unlike many others, it wasn’t because I had too. I was a chubby baby and  little girl…photos prove that…but by the time I was a young teen, I had lost the ‘baby fat’ and was quite thin.

Perhaps it was unintentional, or perhaps it was meant to hurt and damage, but I have been told since a child how “FAT” I was…I don’t remember being told I was smart, creative, pretty, imaginative,  or any of the other things we generally tell children to bolster self esteem and their sense of value and self worth. Perhaps people did tell me those things, I am sure my grandmother did, but all I remember…my take away from the first 16 years of my life was: You’re fat.

Me at about 13. I am in the middle.
Me at about 13. I am in the middle.
At 15, I'm in the middle with the striped shirt.
At 15, I’m in the middle with the striped shirt.

By the time I was 30, I had been on diet after diet. I’ve done them all, used all the products, bought all the books. I ran, I walked; I did yoga; I biked; I joined gyms,; I took exercise classes; I bought workout tapes. I started smoking. I took laxatives by the box full.

I was Bulimic . It was my dirty little secret. I hid the laxatives like I hid the food i binged on.

It is extremely difficult to see that written down. I know it, I knew it at the time but I have never written it. The power of the written word…it gives me cold chills to see those words on this page.

During these years, my top weight, other than being pregnant, would have been around 120-125. I was 5’6″ tall and I thought, …no, believed…I was fat.

At 23 with my brother. Just before our Dad passed away.
At 23 with my brother. Just before our Dad passed away.

The power of words: spoken straight out; implied, or suggested, to a child… especially to a child, hold power like nothing else. All of my self doubt, self loathing…virtually all the negative thoughts I have ever held about myself stem from a three letter word that I heard over and over and over again…and still do…from people who profess to love me. FAT 

Me at 40
Me at 40

A few years ago, we moved back to the small village where I grew up. In the two years we lived there I became what I had feared and fought my whole life. I gained 60 pounds. I walked right into the trap laid many years earlier with those words. I heard them spoken to me often …even before I gained the weight. “You’re fat”. I wasn’t prepared for the effect they would still have on my life…on my sense of who I am now.

It happened slowly, the weight gain…but picked up speed when my husband left for work after the first year. I became what I thought was expected of me…I became what I had been told my whole life I was. I thought I was stronger, but I was not.

Today I am still struggling to drop the weight, but I no longer live in that village, nor in that head space. I am working very hard to put those words and the reasons behind them into perspective. It’s not easy and I struggle everyday…with both issues.

 

We must encourage our children and watch closely what we say to them. We need to reinforce all the positives, nurture and love them. We need to balance out all the negatives they will hear in the world and teach them how to deal with those things that are hateful and harmful.

Most of all we need to listen to my granddaughter’s Mum, and never call a child FAT. It’s not nice.