Action movies with a female lead are far and few between, usher in, Atomic Blonde! Coming 11/14/17 to DVD, BluRay and Digital, this action packed movie will keep you on the edge of your seat. Charlize Theron is absolutely incredible in this 80s Cold War era spy movie. Not your typicalspy movie and just when you think you have it all figured out…I won’t ruin this for you. Grab some popcorn and your best movie mate because this is one you won’t want to miss. Continue reading “Kick Ass Movie Night with Atomic Blonde”
Give the Gift of Fashion – Jane.com
Welcome to the Networking Perks 2017 Something For Everyone Holiday Perks Gift Guide
Your Gift Guide Co-Hosts Are:
The Five Fish
Networking Witches
This year the Holiday Perks gift guide theme is “something for everyone” and finding a one stop place to shop for everyone on your list can be a challenge. Not, however, for Jane.Com, who carries handmade and boutique deals for up to 80% off everyday. Even better? These deals can be delivered to your email daily! Continue reading “Give the Gift of Fashion – Jane.com”
Look your Holiday Best with NeoCell
Welcome to the Networking Perks 2017 Something For Everyone Holiday Perks Gift Guide
Your Gift Guide Co-Hosts Are:
The Five Fish
Networking Witches
Winter brings on dry skin and it’s hard to look your best for the holidays when your skin is itchy and dry. NeoCell Glow Matrix helps hydrate your skin. This non-gmo & gluten free dietary supplement comes with 90 Capsules, enough for a whole month. Continue reading “Look your Holiday Best with NeoCell”
Sleep Well Mediflow Floating Comfort Pillow
Sleep is a precious commodity in our house. Since having kids, and especially my twins, I’ve adapted to a certain level of sleep. Couple that with getting older as a woman; hot flashes, night sweats, and my sleep is all over the place. The Chad is much the same, only he has spinal issues that interrupt his nightly rest. A bad back and cervical neck discomfort and he tosses and turns which in turn causes me to toss and turn because I have become a rather light sleeper. Pillows, or my woobie as I so fondly call it, are generally the culprit for restless sleeping. Continue reading “Sleep Well Mediflow Floating Comfort Pillow”
The Eye of the Hurricane
Was the first day of September and my Dad sent me a text. His words ever so sincere and deeply concerned. “Karie Babe, please be prepared for Irma. I just saw on the news the models for a possible Cat 5 storm. Bottled water, canned goods, batteries. I love you so much.” Flippantly, I dismissed his words as a retired man’s plight to watching too much Fox news. Had I not been so arrogant. Continue reading “The Eye of the Hurricane”
Stuff Their Stocking – Boyz II Men
Welcome to the Networking Perks 2017 Something For Everyone Holiday Perks Gift Guide
Your Gift Guide Co-Hosts Are:
The Five Fish
Networking Witches
Bring back the vintage and romance for the holidays. Under the Streetlight by Boyz II Men stuffed in a stocking is perfect for him or her. Better yet it’s a great listen when the lights are low and only the Christmas tree lights are twinkling.
Continue reading “Stuff Their Stocking – Boyz II Men”
Gift With Games – Winning Moves
Welcome to the Networking Perks 2017 Something For Everyone Holiday Perks Gift Guide
Your Gift Guide Co-Hosts Are:
The Five Fish
Networking Witches
Moving Cross Country
Summer time is the busiest time of year for moving. While this is the slowest and most boring for school aged children, this is the busiest time for adults. Our family recently planned a cross country move with a van line due to my husband taking a new job. What was supposed to be a one year timeline turned into a one month sprint. In less than three weeks, we packed our entire house, shipped our cars, found a house, registered our kids for school and somehow managed to keep our sanity while moving cross country. Continue reading “Moving Cross Country”
Gluten Free Bar Grab and Go Bites
A few years ago I began heavily researching and looking into the “gluten free” craze. A former friend of mine had elected a gluten free diet and I was not sure about how the decision would affect ones health. What I found is that certain food options were excluding particular grains and using other flour bases for ease of digestion. Hence why folks who suffer from Celiacs can enjoy the alternative food options in their diet. In my investigations, for those of us who choose gluten free and are not a slave to the dietary restriction, I found that by adding in gluten free food options creates for a more well balanced diet. Continue reading “Gluten Free Bar Grab and Go Bites”
I grieve
Sweat was hiding the tears as they trickled down my flushed cheeks. Most tears these days have been shed in silence, in hiding. Now I stand in the middle of a busy gym on the outskirts of Orlando. The smell of wet iron, the hint of copper, humbled by my current experience of feeling weak handling the iron, exposing my current internal weaknesses; which has been making every attempt to hide any feelings. Swallowing back the pain, unloading the plates off the bar, collecting my things, I went to my car to sob and further hide any visible pain.
Out of the industrial constructs and into the woods of the Florida state road to the place I now call home. The driving is soothing, but the tears continue to stream down my face, the sadness feels warm in my chest and almost overwhelming, as I feel the tightening and fight the feeling of my adrenaline. I am alone. My day is surrounded by the four walls that protect me from the world outside. Bearing these feelings is exhausting as I hide the pain from my entire family. A single friend, one near and dear, friends for over a decade and never meeting in person, has been my audience. My audience of one outside of The Chad who knows my struggle.
Having uprooted my family from Phoenix nearly eight weeks ago I have tried to find where exactly I fit. When I moved to Albuquerque in 1997 I immediately found my niche. I was able to meet people quickly. At work, within the community, my father’s associates, their spouses; friends and a community were no struggle. Having met The Chad, he became my community, my family, we combined and made it our community together. His friends mine and vice versa. Moving to Phoenix in 2003 The Chad and I struggled a bit to find our place. A young couple with a new baby created limitations in our social interactions, but still we managed to create a small community for ourselves over the past several years, and still surrounded by family, albeit my family this time while his still remained in Albuquerque.
Today, I find myself completely lost. Unsure where to start. I started by joining a gym in hopes of meeting other like minded individuals, women and men. Surely I could meet others the way I found a home with my former gym family; a way to escape the desert of the work from home life as a writer. Solitary work as a writer, I find myself the epitome of the stereotype. Searching for words, the strain to write anything of meaning otherwise the message nothing more than just text, I dare not share the conflict and strife of my intimate life for fear of pity or worse, more rejection. The shame of sadness, of feeling. Singularity yet again. Who would care to read the text of some random human. Such a balance of payments. Alone in my work, alone in the iron, alone in my thoughts.
This post was terrifying enough to write. I know my father is reading, possibly my mother, all privy to the solitary confinement of my feelings. Locked away for the past eight weeks as I have pushed through in eldest child fashion. Soldier on, as I always have, making every futile attempt to exhibit happy. When truly I grieve.
The feeling I have wrestled with like Heracles and Anateus, grief, crushing me. The past year has been a year of grieving for me that I have denied myself. The loss of a person I considered a dear friend, while she is still living, our friendship (in spite of my earnest and loving efforts) died. The devastating loss of my grandmother. Upon receiving the news of her passing I was greeted with house guests, soldiering on, I never had moments to grieve like I felt I should. Now I grieve the loss of a former life.
Life was almost Zionistic. My husband and I were both afforded the opportunity to work from home. In constant enjoyment of one another’s company. We never tired of each other, and were like love sick teenagers anytime one was away from the other. A wonderful community of people who banded together, as any village would, to be a part of our children’s lives where we could each rely on another for support. Neighbors that would dole out a ration of grief if they didn’t get the text you had a party when they were on a nightly constitutional through the neighborhood and saw more cars than normal in your driveway. Siblings to come to dinner and weekend pool parties, having long, philosophical talks of nothing and everything all at once. Enjoying watching my children flourish in this community we helped to build for them as well.
Now I grieve. Typing as a release in my grief, of a life I left 2194 miles away. My entire family. My friends. My home that I had raised my children for the last 14 years. I grieve and I am lost. My tropical, vacation like environment leaves me lost and bewildered of where to next. Where do I go from here? How do I start over at 40? My surroundings unfamiliar and what once felt like an adventure now brings about dread and loneliness. An occasional phone call, a random tag on a Facebook post, but nonetheless the day-to-day is habitual and regimented, empty and unfulfilling.
I prepared for everything in our cross country move. Everything had a box, a schedule, an arrangement, a preparedness. What I never prepared for was what I would feel once all the boxes were unloaded. After the final tractor trailer delivered our belongings. When my license plates no longer shimmered of purple majestic mountains across a burning horizon with the shadow of the saguaro. What I never planned for was the grief and the reality of being alone.