New Year’s 2010

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Happy New Year!  It is 2010, and I can only hope that this year is better than last!  Having Soldier Daddy home is definately a good start, however!!  ♥  We rang it in with good friends and adult beverages at midnight, after a night of laughter, so much that I was pretty sure that at some point I was going to have a very embarrassing accident!  But, fortunately for my ego, I did NOT pee myself!!

I never make resolutions for the new year, because they always tend to be grandiose and impossible to meet.  So, instead I make goals, big and small.  I believe in learning from the past, but shedding the negativity and starting afresh each year and that is exactly what I had in mind when I made my goals for the year.

  1. Lose weight and take better care of myself, at whatever weight I might be.  (I kind of think this is a standard issue goal for 90% of the women out there, but hey!)
  2. Find a way to get in better touch with my spirituality.  This one has been a goal for a while and I have been failing miserably, mainly because I haven’t paid it the attention it deserves.  But I feel like I need to get grounded in it again.
  3. Let some things go that are serving no purpose other than overwhelming me with negativity.  I have actually made a huge step on this one in one area, and it makes me feel so good!


It’s all about choices,…

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Donovan and I went to see the Army recruiter yesterday in Watertown.  It was part of our deal that when exploring his options for the future, especially college, that he talk to the Army recruiter and listen with an open mind and take the ASVAB.  With the economy the way it is, full ride scholarships are becoming fewer and farther between and the cost of tuition keeps going up.  And let’s face it.  An Army family is NOT made of money AND there are still three more children after him.  College is HUGELY important to him so I wanted him to know all the options open to him so that he can make the best decision for himself.  That was what yesterday was about.  Listening, learning, and getting some sense of other options out there to gain his goal. 

So we met with SSG Mower yesterday afternoon and I was very impressed with him.  Recruiters sometimes get a bad rap, unfortunately sometimes deserved, for BSing people to meet recruitment quotas.  There was none of that with this guy, no sugar coating of the facts.  A mark of a good recruiter, in my eyes.  Of course, most of what he had to say we both knew already, which kind of happens when both parents have been or are active duty and have, between them, run the gamut of MOSs!  But we did  learn a couple new things, one of which directly related to college stuff.  As of August 1st, the Montgomery GI Bill is changing.  It used to be that the soldier paid $100 a month for the first year of service and then received the GI Bill benefits.  As the amount authorized raised, the soldier was grandfathered into receiving that higher amount.  Now the soldier no longer pays into it, and not only receives the money to pay for school,but also recieves an additional stipend that is to help with living expenses, books, etc.  All of this, on TOP of your regular paycheck, if you choose to use your GI Bill while still in the Army.  This is in addition to the tuition assistance program still in place.  So the soldier basically gets their college education for free, usually in accelerated terms so they finish faster, all while receiving a full paycheck and the additional stipend.  That is a very good deal.  The other new thing was a program for seniors.  If the senior enlists before they graduate, they receive $500 a month every month until they ship, which is kind a neat thing.

So that was all yesterday was about.  Listening and learning about another option to get what he wants for his future.  Little did I know the amount of shit I was going to take for taking him to the recruiter.  Since then, I have been called a bad mother, told I was forcing him into something, told that I underestimate my son, told that I was stupid for supporting the idea, yelled at, criticized and degraded.  Opinions are one thing, and those I appreciate, even if they are different from mine.  What I don’t appreciate is being called names, yelled at, jumped on, insulted and judged.  Especially when it comes from people who have absolutely no right to judge me for anything, much less this.

It irritates the hell out of me, especially since the whole point was simply to give him options to get his goal.  If he chooses another path, that is perfectly okay and I will support anything he does.  Hell, if he decides to say screw it all, and runs off to join the circus, I will ask for freaking tickets!  The whole point is his happiness, his future, and getting what is important to him.  All this was about was giving him choices.  HIS choices, not mine.  Get off my freaking back already and stop judging me.


This, that, & 1 week down,…

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The countdown begins
Well, Week 1 of the deployment is now over.  He is in Afghanistan, but not at his final destination yet.    I am going to assume that no news is good news since I haven't heard from him since right after he got there, which is totally normal.  Since he was sick when he left, I can only hope that he is feeling marginally human again.  But I think that is probably just wishful thinking! 

The year of Kiki
I don't do resolutions at New Year's, mainly because I find them somewhat of a recipe for failure.  It is a proven fact that most people break their resolutions within the first month, and that just totally kills the motivation for me.  So I make goals instead.  My goals for the year,…

  • Lose about 50lbs, more or less.  I'm not too picky because I have had 4 kids and I am  pushing 40.
  • Find some inner peace again.  2008 was a really rough year for me and I really lost faith in a lot of things.
  • Get in touch with my spirituality again.  Like I said, I lost a lot of faith and my spirituality was one of them.
  • Get my house organized and reduce my material goods by at least 25%.
  • Make myself a priority, as well as my family.