I’ve spent a few weeks just building the habit of walking regularly on the treadmill, fifteen minutes a day (baby steps, remember). Then I did a few long walks. Monday, I finally ran.
Well, jogged. Slowly. A little above a walk.
Did the same Tuesday. And today.
It feels really, really good.
I use Zombies, Run (Abel Township is very glad to have me back after my illness, I am sure–things were in disrepair) combined with my own playlists. Toward the end of the run or walk or whatever I’m doing, I always hit the last five minutes and do. not. want. to. keep. going.
Doesn’t matter if I’ve been there for fifteen minutes, thirty, forty, or an hour. I will come up with a hundred reasons why I should just quit early. I’ve done enough, I’m tired, I’m bored, blah blah blah. Oh there’s a thing I should do, maybe I could just stretch for a bit. I know this about me and as soon as I give in and quit early, the next time I will quit earlier, and soon I’ll convince myself I can start skipping days. It goes downhill from there.
So on my playlist, I usually cycle to particular songs at particular times to keep me motivated. The last few minutes, when I want to quit?
Florence + The Machine. Shake It Off.
It’s my song when I’m exhausted and hopeless and need a kick to just embrace the dark and the demons and the suck and dance anyway. Little by little, my speed picks up, until I hit the bridge.
And I’m damned if I do and I’m damned if I don’t
So here’s to drinks in the dark at the end of my road
And I’m ready to suffer and I’m ready to hope
It’s a shot in the dark aimed right at my throat
‘Cause looking for heaven, found the devil in me
Looking for heaven, found the devil in me
Well what the hell I’m gonna let it happen to me, yeah
That is probably the fastest part of my run, when gaze is locked on the gazebo outside and brain completely empties of thought and I end up just flying. It carries me to the end of the run (or mission, I should say).
So it’s New Year’s Eve. I’m going to watch Psych reruns on Netflix and finish a short story (maybe), eat some pastry appetizers (definitely), and sneak a screwdriver (I am not supposed to have alcohol but I’m pretty sure one mixed drink won’t kill me), and shake off the good and the bad and all of 2014.
Have a good evening/morning/what have you, boys and girls, and may 2015 be kind.

So why am I thanking her? Because my greatest fear, one of the main reasons I always have avoided doctors/hospitals, is because I’m afraid of being told I’m just crazy. I mean, a real deep fear that’s burrowed right into my marrow. I have been gaslighted and manipulated before, and taught not to trust myself. I imagine a lot of crazy people live with this fear–it’s pretty reasonable. Now, though? Now I know I wasn’t crazy. I know I can trust myself; I know me, I know my brain, I know my disorder, and when I have symptoms that have nothing to do with my brain, I know I’m not making them up. I know how to advocate for myself or ensure, when I’m vulnerable, that I have an advocate with me (my mum). I am very well prepared now to navigate all the doctor shit I will have to deal with the rest of my life. So thank you, Ms Nurse Practitioner, for bringing my worst fear to life and teaching me that the biggest concern is not me wasting a medical professional’s time, but them wasting mine.
Moving on. My friends were also tremendously supportive. I am going to try to list some and forgive me if I miss a name. But Dina (DINA DINA DINA), Danni, Skye, Lili, Judy, Krista, Adrienne, Mel, Shell, and many more–in a hundred different ways, they threw help my way. Whether it was tossing pennies at me, letting me vent, talking me through stuff, making me go to the doctor and demand help, etc. Even just checking in to ask how I was feeling meant a lot to me, because for so many months I was in bed most of the time and couldn’t even do the few volunteer things that took me outside of the apartment once a week so I had no contact with others. Seriously, I could write entire essays on how fantastic my friends–chosen family–are. All it takes is a few crises to be reminded that I’ve somehow managed to surround myself with the best people in the universe, who I have somehow tricked into liking me.
My grandfather, who will never read this because he doesn’t understand the internet/computers/etc…my grandpa turned one hundred years old in July. He still lives on his own in his own house. And he has shown so much concern for me, I can’t even tell you. Since I got sick and clearly wasn’t getting better, he called Mum daily to ask how I was and called me 1-2 times a week to check in. He still does. Granted, his memory’s not great, so he forgets everything we’ve told him, but he still phones to make sure I’m okay, and that means the world to me.
2014 also marked the first time in my life I could wish my brothers a Merry Christmas (and them me, except that’s different, because they had the reason of not knowing I existed). It is still a lot to wrap my brain around but it’s A Thing That Is Happening Now, a good thing at that, and hopefully one day I’ll stop making this face o.O about it.

Finally.


If you are a writer with a book to publish, you can pick up a pre-made cover instead
and again, that’s money that comes to me just as if you’d used PayPal except you get some urban fantasy for your trouble. I am a pretty good writer and spin a decent tale if you’re into female characters often deemed “unlikable” and violence and naughty words and stuff.

First, it is Hors d’Oeuvre Day: I buy boxes of (vegetarian) appetizers at M&M Meats and that’s all I eat all day. Appetizers are my favourite things, all tasty bitesize goodies (when I eat out, I rarely look at the main dishes–I could just eat appetizers for a meal). Breakfast, lunch, dinner, that’s all I eat on my birthday. Next, for nostalgia reasons, I play my old Buffy Xbox games (I played the first one on my birthday many, many moons ago, and it was just OMG fantastic because BUFFY). This is my gift to myself.
‘ve bought my appetizers, the games are waiting. I’ll be in my pajamas, mostly offline all day. Usually I get booze too but I don’t know how they’ll react with my meds, so no alcohol for me. But my birthday is set.
Writer of urban fantasy, thrillers/mysteries, and horror.