Monday, October 24, 2016

The Dream Machine

My husband gave me a new alarm clock for my birthday last week. There were several other gifts that I loved, but this one kind of rocked my world.

"Finally you won't have to smash the buttons anymore...AND you'll be able to see what time it is!" He was grinning ear to ear, proud of this gift, knowing this was something I had needed for a long time.

I hesitated.

Yes, my alarm clock had seen better days. Yes, sometimes the buttons called for back up reinforcement (thank you very much Sharpie pen cap). And yes, the digits on the little screen were getting hard for me to read in my old age...but I haven't had the heart to part with it.

I invested in the Sony Dream Machine in the summer of 1997 just before I headed off to college. I used my graduation money because I knew better than to ask my parents for a $100 alarm clock. I chose this one because it had a digital screen AND I could either wake up to the buzzer OR music. Bonus: I didn't have to guess what station it was on because again, it was digital, and I had total control. Score.

The Dream Machine has been next to my bed for 19 years. At times I've joked that this alarm clock is the one thing that's been with me for almost my entire adulthood (if you can count college as adulthood?!) Even my favorite pieces of jewelry haven't stuck around this long.

I think the look on my face gave it away...was I ready to pull the plug on the Dream Machine and replace it with a shinier, newer model? I felt conflicted. It might sound silly, but clearly I have an emotional connection to this alarm clock.

Memories flooded my heart...good ones and bad. The best moments of my life have been witnessed by this alarm clock, along with moments when my heart was breaking into a million pieces. The Dream Machine woke me up on the day my parents got divorced, the day I graduated from college, they day I packed up my life and moved to Georgia, my first day of school as a teacher, my wedding day in 2005, the day I started my own company, the day I become a mother, the day we buried my mother in law, the day I realized I was having a nervous breakdown, the day I knew I had to leave my marriage, my first day as a "single mom", the day I surrendered my life to God again, the day I felt like I could finally breathe again, the day we signed our book deal, the day I met my {now} husband Clay, the day I fell in love again...I could go on.

The Dream Machine has been through 19 years of dreams with me...some have worked out better than others. While I have grown through the tears and the joy, this little black box has stayed the same.

I had a completely different post planned for this week's blog, but for some reason I felt led to share this instead. Is it crazy to feel so connected to something that just plugs into a wall? Are my sentiments random and crazy or is there something in your life you've held on to, solely for the memories it holds?

I pulled the plug on Friday night. A shiny new alarm clock with big digital numbers and fancy buttons now sits next to my bed. I am ready to embrace this next phase of my life, finally letting go of something that I've held on to for so long. I know the next 19 years will be filled with wonderful new memories as I continue to dream.

As for the Dream Machine? I've retired it to my office...because it still works and you never know when you'll need back up :)


Tuesday, October 18, 2016

To Tear... or Not to Tear...

To Tear... or Not to Tear...
That is the REAL Question

Especially when you are Fall cleaning your storage area / garage.  
With your 8yr old son.  
On one of the most beautiful sunshiny days of Fall break he would "WAYYYYYY rather be doing anything than this Mommy".  
{I did not test him on that, but I should have.}

As many of you know, besides being a writer, I am also an Organizer / Personal Assistant.  So here goes the very unprofessional confession...  I hadn't fully unpacked, sorted, purged, done anything remotely resembling organization with our storage area since I had moved in last year.  I literally just closed my eyes while I typed that so I couldn't see the look on your cyber face.

Everything just sitting there in closed boxes, mysteriously labeled in layers of black sharpie on the top of dented box after weathered cardboard box that had sadly been used one too many times moving in the last five years since my divorce.  None of it really the stuff I needed, I did unpack those boxes {insert golf clap in 1 - 2 - 3}, however the things I didn't need or didn't want inside the house were all shoved into corners around the perimeter of our "fake garage" as I had called the storage area.

Most of them sad little shells of a box that was once neatly labeled "Guest Bathroom" that had sloppily been crossed out with an almost-dry Sharpie.  Another label boldly written half-way over it clearly rushed with forceful handwriting labeled "KITchen" now XX out. And a third time written in upperhand letters, appearing as if the ink was almost willing it to stick this time - "OFFICE".

That's mostly what our "fake garage" contained.  The unwanted and unused of my past married life.

I had grown tired of moving, and clearly unpacking the items I just didn't want to remember.  Sure there were huge reasons why I kept having to move my young son and I from house to house like a lost carrier pigeon.  The Big D, I was incredibly sick, and because the people I was renting from to re-establish myself after Divorce wanted to sell and didn't accept my offer.  

My past on parade.  And I simply did not want to face it all in Kodak's finest color bleed glory, especially because I believed I had moved on and risen above it all.  Big time.  In big band fashion where the cymbal had already come crashing down.

But even in moving on and having "dealt" with it - there are certain parts I believe you should take all the time you need to let it sit in disarray although packaged nicely, because you just don't care to have it under "control"...

Oh say something like all my memories from the walls and shelves of my marital house, I brought my baby home to, sitting in dusty crumpled U-Haul triple taped boxes.
The home I
Never.  Ever.  Wanted 
to leave.

Besides the memories I wasn't sure I was ready to look at, were box upon sagging box of the DIVORCE stuff that one is advised to and has to keep.  Because hello!!!  It might bring bad energy if it is actually kept inside our homes filed away neatly, and there was no way I was riskin' that!!!.  
- Filing papers.  {Yuck}
- Versions upon versions of separation agreements.  {A few had scribbles of choice words that still make me giggle}
- Binders I had made for logs and proof.  {Part of the inspiration for The Ex-Wives Guide To Divorce!}
- All the old financial paperwork I killed a tree or six, gathering to copy to turn in to my attorney to determine my financial fate.  {Okay... so I killed a forest, but it was a small one and I promise to replant}
Now all that was easy to eyeball and sort through and re-organize now.  Because all of these items, if needed to ever dredge up again, where waiting for me tabbed, sorted, and ready to wow even Martha Stewart.  Those were the items that elicited NO emotion from me.

However the box with photo safe paper gently cradling the old carefully chosen 8x10 matte snapshots of our no-longer family....  Well that I hadn't been ready to look at, UNTIL NOW, five years later, as I knew a geyser of emotions would bubble from deep within.  All of it, laying unstirred in the only box that had NOT been re-packed and re-labeled or opened during all the moves.  The box that had been used only once, covered on each side with thin sharpie letters in dark black, saying "Photos - NOT to Open".

The photos I distinctly remember asking myself when packing the first time...  To Tear, or Not to Tear.

When packing that small sized box, I knew I was at that point there was just no going back.  I tried, more than most ANYBODY I know would have tried to save our marriage with the circumstances I was dealing with.  Gut wrenching, keep you awake all night that no amount of reallllyyyy expensive eye cream can fix.  I tried.  Both the saving of the marriage and the pricey eye cream.  Neither worked.  {Or gave me my money back now that I think about it?!?}

So why didn't I tear or cut or both those photos originally?  Well because my Father had walked away from our family when I was 10 during my parents divorce and I just didn't or wouldn't imagine a world for my son without both parents just "in it."  Even when I was in the thick of the divorce.  SO I PUT DOWN THE SCISSORS, and packed this box gingerly.  Not knowing what life would hold for my son {or myself really!}, but knowing it would not be a life with torn pictures of his past in it.  

Because for something to have a future it has to have a starting point, 
and although it was not the most ideal, 
it was in fact my son's starting point.

All these shiny happy family photos staring me down, thanking me I didn't tear them up, so my son could look back some day.  TODAY in-fact.  Knowing that despite it all - he was a product of a type of love and had a family that was worth framing at some point.   The marriage photos?  Well I saved a few for my son {also in this time-capsule of happy family charade} and admittedly burned a few.  But that was therapeutic.  Very very very therapeutic.  Probably made me a better Mommy.  Definitely made me a better Mommy.

As I went to close the box, my son walked in after spending 20 minutes getting me more water {stall tacticts at it's finest} and asked me what I was looking at.  I held up this old photo and told him bluntly "Old pictures of our family."  He walked faster than I had seen him move all day since the start of the cleaning, and grabbed the top photo eyes wide open, mouth cocked to the left. 

This photo of us on the beach as the Shepherd Family in Australia right before the "crash".  My son just shy of 2 years old.  Staring up at the heavens above, as if they were pouring all the light and love into his little body to prepare him for what he was about to face.



My son, still in awe that his convictions deep down inside he did once have a traditional family confirmed, said "Mommy - can I put some of these in my room or give them to my baby some day?".  The more sensible side of me wanted to say well that will be a long time because you're not dating until you're 30, but the more sentimental side of me kept my eyes down but replied "Of course my Little Bee." 

He then asked me if I remembered all of these pictures and did I know they were "lost" in here?  And I did the one thing I hate to do to my son... I lied.  Well except when I eat his Halloween candy - lying is totally allowed then.

I lied for the same reason I did not just tear up the pictures in the first place.  Because telling the truth or destroying pictures wouldn't be exactly helping honor those old memories and his starting point.  And if there is one thing I do want to do for my son, well it's honor those memories that brought him in and up in a world he felt {and still feels} nothing but love.

So although we urge you when going through the "Big D" {Divorce} to get your head quickly out of the sand and help build your own dream sand castle sans Prince Charming, it's okay by me if you have a memory thing or two boxed up and locked until you're ready to face it.  

We ALL have a box or two that we need to save until we're ready.

Because most times we find buried treasure in the sand {or "fake garage"} and although you might not want or need it after all in your life, at the end of the day it is still treasure to someone.

Love, Valerie {and Holiday}






Monday, October 10, 2016

Houston...you ROCK!

We all have them...friends who say they will pull through for you, but when push comes to shove, the request, favor and/or "hook up" ultimately disintegrates into excuses...to avoid an awkward friendship moment the person requesting the favor politely forgets and said friend continues to push off the inevitable...it just ain't gonna happen.

Not this time.

Four years ago I sat down with my friends Yvonne and Randy during a conference in Dallas, TX. They invited me to their room for some wine and cheese, and I arrived with The Ex-Wives' Guide to Divorce proposal in hand. Our book was in the beginning stages and I knew they would give me honest feedback.

After reading through it, Randy's exact words were, "This is awesome. Call me when you get published. I'll hook you up in Houston."

Fast forward four years. The Ex-Wives' Guide to Divorce launched August 16, 2016. My call to Randy went something like this: "Randy...hey, it's Holiday. Our book is out. I'm pulling the favor card."

Randy did not disappoint. Flights were booked, appearances on multiple television spots, magazine interviews and local bookstore appearances were scheduled. Not only that but his amazing wife Yvonne escorted us around town in her PINK Escalade. Yes, I said PINK.

on the plane...Valerie was rockin' the hat :)

Yvonne and Randy opened their home and rearranged their lives for us for 3 days. They chauffeured us around Houston at ungodly hours of the morning. They worked countless hours to make sure this trip would be seamless AND beneficial. Valerie and I were blown away by their generosity. These people are the REAL DEAL.

Our trip to Houston was surreal. This was our first taste of the media, especially with our exciting television debut on the Great Day Houston show. Deborah Duncan was a dream host, engaging with us AND extending our time spot on the show. As Valerie and I were sitting side by side in our chairs on set we glanced at each other and smiled...this was the moment we had been waiting for. Our chance to share The Ex-Wives' Guide to Divorce with the world (okay...it was only Houston, but still...we were seriously excited!). As chance would have it, we met some fellow ex-wives in the green room who were also part of the show...proof that we aren't the only ex-wives who are also friends.
Green Room selfie!

LIVE on the air!


After the show Deborah came to the green room to chat with us...she is the coolest chick ever!

Following Great Day Houston we were whisked away to Fox News Channel 26. Our interview was fast and furious, and we got a taste of what a real news room was like.
We {heart} Fox News!



We rushed out of the newsroom and headed to a local Starbucks to meet the beautiful Maggie Gordon, a reporter for the Houston Chronicle. Our interview with Maggie lasted a little over an hour and then we were off again.

We ended the day with a book signing/appearance at the River Oaks Barnes and Noble. We signed books, took pictures, and even enjoyed a chocolate croissant on the house. Ahhhh...the perks of being published authors : )
Autographing copies...dream come true!

Pic for our goal posters...Bestseller wall!
On Friday we visited the Lance Roberts Show on iHeart Radio, and let's just say we didn't even need coffee to enjoy their company at 5am! We had a blast sitting in studio, chatting and having a ball with these guys...we LOVED being on radio (the no-makeup or fancy outfit was also a plus seeing how we were basically sleepwalking).


After the radio show we headed over to the River Oaks Bookstore. Can I just say...this was the GREATEST. BOOKSTORE. EVER. Charming, quaint, and absolutely perfect in every way (just like the one from the movie You've Got Mail with Meg Ryan). The owner of 44 years, Jeanne, welcomed us from her rocking chair, offered cookies and refreshments, and showed us to a table they had so graciously prepared with stacks of our books, ready to sign and sell. Valerie and I visited with guests who arrived for pictures and autographs. We were mesmerized by Jeanne and her ability to welcome each guest by name, personally recommending books for them based on their previous purchases.
hanging with Yvonne before our book signing


We wrapped the day up with a bow, having a celebratory dinner on the deck of a fabulous restaurant, ordering "one of everything"...it was the perfect way to end a perfect day.

On Saturday we were guests on Randy's radio show, Gardenline. By 6am we were on-air, taking questions from call-in guests and dishing out advice for those facing the big D.

Randy in his element!

We LOVE iheartradio!


The trip to Houston was a whirlwind...we learned so much on this first leg of our media tour...most of all, we are thankful for incredible friends who made it HAPPEN. So to Yvonne and Randy...THANK YOU! We know this is just the beginning of our journey...we are so grateful!

xo Holiday & Valerie
P.S. Click here to watch our Great Day Houston television interview with Deborah Duncan!