Archive for the ‘Boston’ Category

Pretty Pretty Dollies

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

I have made the decision to make this blog a bit more personal.  When I was sixteen I was diagnosed and began treatment for depression.  Although I assume and believe I was depressed long before diagnosis, my symptoms and the crazy growing inside me, manifested themselves right around adolescence.  I was never one to mope and cry. My chemical imbalance took the form of anger.  Pure unadulterated anger.  Since I was a girl (still am last time I checked) I didn’t get into fights and break things all that often.  I was verbally nasty.  I said things to hurt my mother (sorry Mum) and brothers- often times intentionally.  I’m sure I said things that hurt my Dad too but I never did that on purpose.. I guess that’s part of being a total daddy’s girl.  I know now that I did and said these things because I was angry at myself, not my family, but at the time I’m sure that was of little comfort to them.  The crazy runs deep in my family.  I won’t get into specific details because I’m not sure how much info my family would be comfortable with me sharing about them.  I will say that I don’t need a scientific journal to tell me that depression can be hereditary.  I hated middle school.  I hated high school a little less.  I was miserable.  I was picked on for every possible reason –  I have red hair, I had dandruff, pimples, I am short, weird… you name it, I was teased about it or bullied over it.  I had salt and flower dumped on me, although to this day I’m not sure why, or what point that was supposed to make.  Every day I went to school from the 4th to the 12th grade was an uphill battle, in the rain, with a nine iron.  I never stood up to the assholes who bothered me.  I never told on them or reported any of it.  I should have.  Maybe that would have helped.  Instead I took all that hate and animosity and internalized it.  Then I took my anger home and unleashed it on my unsuspecting family.  Epic suck. For them and for me.   How stupid was I?  The only purpose this behavior served was to make my home life as stressful and upsetting as my life at school.  I don’t believe that internalizing my anger and being verbally abusive to my family was a totally conscious decision.  I was very young when the feelings of total desperation and overwhelming anxiety started.  I’m not sure I had the capacity to deal with my very intense feelings in a more adult manner.  (Please note: this is NOT an excuse, just a stab in the dark at explaining my behavior)  So…. After a particularly knarly break up with the boy I dated in high school, I decided (along with my parents) that we’d all had enough and that my crazy had grown to such a size that it required medication.  Off I went to my pediatrician, where I was given a high dose of Paxil.  Now I’m not sure if it was the drugs, or the move to Boston, but my life got much better, very, very quickly.  I was happy and social and making friends for the first time in my life.  I felt really good.  Too good.  I soon had to leave college and return home to connecti-shit due to an overabundance of socialization, which led to bad grades.  In a some-what related story that I will tell another time, my move home was needed and resulted in me eventually meeting my husband and best friend, so very awesome and totally worth it.  After a few months of being back in my home state the doctors decided it would be a good idea to take me off the Paxil.  I was ok for a while as I prepared for my return to my beloved Boston.  I was even ok while I was living in Boston.  My life was great at this point while I was un-medicated.  But only for a short while.  Once I got settled in our new house my crazy started to rear its ugly head again.  I’m actually quite proud to say that I took a very proactive approach towards my depression this time around.  With my husband’s and family’s support I returned to a doctor’s office and was given a script for Prozac.  Now is where I take a minute and profess my absolute love of Prozac.  Prozac keeps me stable.  Instead of having a problem and immediately going to that dark place where the world stops turning, and the death of our universe it imminent, I can see clearly that there is a positive way to resolve the problem and move forward.  I was less frustrated the second time around.  I have an amazing husband, a nice little house, I’ve carved out a little comfy niche for myself.  Life is pretty damn perfect sans my chemical imbalance.  I will admit that I don’t even consider going off my meds. No way, no how, not ever.  My marriage and the connections I have with my family and friends are just too important and precious to me.  I don’t want to jeopardize any of the goodness that is my life right now.  I do feel badly about the way I treated my family and my ex high school boyfriend.  Sorry guys, I brought the crazy every day and I have no idea how hard that could have been for you.  I’m in no way perfect now, I’m a work in progress.   And since there is no way to photograph depression, here is a photo of my foot.

Boston is my heart

U2.. boo..hoo

Monday, October 5th, 2009

A few weekends ago Mick and I took a trip up to Boston (yea!!!) to see U2 and to get some yummy pizza.  Needless to say we had a blast.  The concert was good (not great) and the drive up was so much fun.   We dropped the furry kids off at their grandparents and shipped up to Boston.  Mick and I don’t get a lot of time alone… just the two of us… without friends… without dogs.. or family around us.  Not that we’re upset by this.  Quite the contrary.  We love big group outings and our dogs are our life.  But it was fun to have a romantic little get-away just the two of us.  The stage for the show was ah-maze-zing!!!!  The sound quality was so bad that we couldn’t hear Bono but the beer was flowing and there was a mini Micky D’s right in Gillette Stadium so I was a happy little bug.  The next day we went to the basketball hall of fame in Springfield and had killer ravioli at Pazzo’s.  Such a wicked weekend. I loved to see all the Celtic memorabilia at the hall of fame and Mick and I shot some hoops.  We returned to some very happy puppies who had missed us lots. 

U2

Master Manipulator

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

So after discussing our tropical trip Mick has convinced me to go to Boston instead.  How does he do that?  Not only did I give up my Atlantis trip, I did so WILLINGLY!  He flashes those beautiful baby blue eyes and I just turn to mush.  It’s totally my fault.  Not only is Mick super sexy, he’s smart, and that makes him even more sexy.  I have so much respect for him and when he makes a valid point it’s hard to disagree.  I believe his exact words were, “Wouldn’t you want to spend your special birthday in your most favorite place in the world with me?  Wouldn’t that be more special then going some place neither one of us know and may not like?”  Although I think there is very little chance of us not enjoying ourselves in the Bahamas he made some very good points about the cost of Boston vs. the cost of Atlantis.  Right now in our lives its much easier to pack up the car and head to Beantown then to take a major trip requiring plane tickets and expensive accommodations.  Harley can also accompany us to Boston.  That’s a huge consideration for me, as I hate to leave him anywhere alone without Mick or me for any long periods of time.  Harley is totally my partner in crime, we go together like lamb and tuna fish.  I am totally committed to making my puppies life as wonderful as possible. 

Smooth Operator 

Sometimes You want to Go Where Everybody Knows Your Name

Friday, July 10th, 2009

And they’re always glad you came.  Do I miss Boston?  Does a bear shit in the woods?  I can’t even begin to describe how much I long for that city.  I love the smell of the T, the Celtics, the fact that the letter R is suspiciously missing from the alphabet of 99.9% of true Bostonians, I love the rich history, the people, just everything really, there isn’t much about Boston I’m not totally in love with.  The fact of the matter is I don’t hate my life here in Connecti-shit.  I love my husband and my dog.  Life is good.  I have a job that pays bills, a yard and a nice house.  I can’t say that my situation here is sub-par.  I have everything I need to make a sweet go of  it.  I lived in Boston for a little over a year in 2002.  I was right in the heart of Jamaica Plain, and despite having strange, loud roommates that smelt funny I loved every moment.  I had started dating Mick who was still living in CT right before I left and he would come to visit 3 days a week and we spent every weekend together.  Our little Plymouth Neon, Boris is a tank and thanks to him we got to see each other almost everyday.  Once Mick proposed and I decided to continue my education it became apparent quite quickly that living in Connecti-shit was going to be much easier.  We would be surrounded by family which is awesome, and living outside a city is far cheaper then living right in one, and this is not even taking into account that college would be worlds less expensive in CT as I was still eligible for in-state tuition.  So the decision was made to move once more.  I packed up my life in Boston and trotted back to a promising new start in my birth state.  I started missing Boston the first day I moved back to CT and I’ve missed it everyday since.  If I could pack up Mick, my family, Harley, our friends and our house and drop it in the middle of Beantown I totally would.  It’s not like we never get to the city.  We take like 4-5 trips up a year.  We go to catch Celtic games and to shop Newbury street and chill in Harvard Square.  The thing I miss most is the Celtic games.  Mick and I would go to almost every home game and we caught most of the 2002 playoffs right up to the eastern conference finals with the Nets.  It was just sweet beyond words.  If there was an away game we’d watch it at the bar down the block from me called Flanagans.  I felt so content while I was living in Boston.  It was home, and always will be.

beantown