My Bucket List

 
Live in at least one other country (Italy for sure!)
Travel the globe…
Eat with my fingers on the floor in Morocco
Do yoga Bali
See a Kangaroo with my kids in Australia
Eat pasta in Rome…
Drink wine/eat pastries/eat French bread and amazing cheese … in Paris
Drive a sports car in the French Riviera
Go hiking in Peru
Watch a soccer game with Kanen in Brazil
Go skiing in Switzerland
Take a million pictures in Greece
Go wine tasting, and rent a tiny car in Tuscany
Stay in a villa

Go to the Super Bowl!
Write my memoir
Write my “how to” book (AKA #HustleBelieveReceive)
Become a motivational speaker
Meet Oprah
Take the train in Europe
Sit front row at a fashion show
 
 
Watch my kids play soccer with local children in Italy and Mexico, while we are on an extended stay.
Have a message on the beach.
Fly in a privet plane.
Go sailing.
Try to catch a fish!
Ride in a helicopter.
Swim with dolphins.
Run a marathon.
Dance in the rain.
Own a lake house and ski boat. 
Go horseback riding.
Take a hot air balloon ride.
Tour Washington DC with my kids.
Skydive.
Have a snowed in New England Christmas.
Drive route 66 with my kids.
Travel through Europe with my kids (I traveled through Italy with my kids).
 
Have a street artist paint me.

Ice skate in Central Park.

Kiss under the Eiffel tower.
Take my kids to New York.
Take a boat ride through Venice Italy.

Spend a fall in Maine.

Go on Safari in Africa.
Go zip-lining  in a forest.
Stay in a tree-house.
See the Grand Canyon.
Take my kids to Disneyland.
Buy a copy of my book in an airport.
Do a Book Signing at Barnes & Noble in NYC.
Take Mira and Izzy on separate vacations alone.
Be on the Today Show.
Fall madly in love.
Get married again.

                                                                                                                                

 
 
 
*UPDATE Jan 24, 2019: the bold you see in my list refers to moment’s I’ve been able to cross off / Manifest SINCE the time I originally wrote this post in 2009.
 
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A FEW THINGS I’VE LEARNED

1: I think jumping out of a plane is totally insane, but still somehow am drawn to the idea.
2: I give my friends silly nicknames like Cherry and Bitchen (love you!)…
3: I think it’s not too much to ask of a six year old to sit quietly at the table, napkin in lap, and eat like an adult. Mine does it (I’m so proud!)
4: I think a good, attentive father is the most attractive thing in the world.
5: I think that when life kicks you in the gut you have no choice but to stand up and fight back. “Pull yourself up by your boot straps” like a good friend once told me.
6: My motto “I can do it, I am strong”. It works for EVERYTHING. Think about it…no matter what it is you want to give up on, if you say that 10 times to yourself, you really can do it.
7: Nothing can humble you more quickly than a child.
8: I’ve learned we really do get better with age. I love myself more now than ever, I appreciate what I’m capable of and love my body for all I’ve put it through.
9: I think starving yourself is over rated.
10: I think nothing is better than a glass of Pinot Noir and a good book, (ok maybe a bottle!).
11: I’ve learned that people are not always who they seem, and that no matter how long you’ve known someone they can still be completely different then what you believed them to be.
12: I’ve also learned that people can be amazing and can support you, and stand by you even when there’s nothing in it for them.
13: I think 2009 will be better than 2008 (come on the bar is pretty low here!
14: I think that liking Britney Spears AND NPR is NOT an oxymoron!
15: I think “crow’s feet” are sexy! …….In that spirit, I think 33 is better than 23!
16: I think there’s nothing better in the whole world then a good, tight, heart-felt hug.
17: I think the Ducks are better than the Beavers! (Eat it!!) (Take that Sarah, Katie and Chris and all you beaver lovers!!!) 🙂
18: I think that the goal of running a marathon this year is totally doable, (does that mean i actually need to start running?? Does it count if I think about it often? What would happen if i actually had a heart attack running the first mile? How long is a marathon again?? OK maybe I’ll do a 5k instead).
19: I’ve learned that faith in myself can go a long way. And that teaching my kids to believe in themselves is harder than it looks.
20: I’ve learned that I’m the only person who can make me feel small and insignificant. …..I’ve learned that I’m NOT small and insignificant……I’ve learned that I’m NOT small and insignificant.
21: I’ve learned that I like nice things, and that just because i like nice things it doesn’t make me “shallow” , but just in case it does…I’m shallow!
22: I think listening to the same song every waking minute is totally normal, especially if that song is “So Beautiful” by Akon and makes you feel like a princess!
23: I think hip-hop dancing while driving is a skill everyone should cultivate, and one I’m especially good at…(so happy my son is at the age when i can embarrass him
24: I was “home schooled” till i was 15. (Does that mean you’re supposed to learn to read/write/math and spell??? Oh then maybe it’s just called not going to school till I was 15
25: I think flying while intoxicated is the ONLY way to go, regardless of takeoff time…(yes i have been known to pound a double bloody-marry at 5:30am…it’s true i may have passed out on my neighbor in route to Dallas
26: My dad delivered me in the back of a VW van in the hospital parking lot. I’ve never seen Star Wars or any 80’s sitcoms. I thought Paula Abdul was a dude. I didn’t eat any kind of meat till I was 16. I was a member of a religious cult as a child…it goes on but you’ll have to buy my memoir to learn more!!
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Letting Go

Today a friend told me, “Sarah I think you have a problem letting go”. My first reaction was to say “wait no I don’t, and who are you to tell me I do?!” But then I thought about it and realized, he was indeed correct; I in fact do, have a problem letting go.
   
But doesn’t everyone? I mean when we move from phase to phase in our lives isn’t it difficult for most people to let go? When you let go you lose that security blanket, regardless of whether it’s the warm fuzzy kind, or the kind that wraps its self around your neck like a Boa Constrictor. Either way, it’s familiar. It’s known. It’s safe.

I thought about this for a while, and reminisced on the past year in my own life. I began to realize that indeed I had been clinging to many things, that were both unhealthy and crippling. I think when you go through a traumatizing experience like what I went through last year, sometimes it’s easier to just bury it in the bottom of the ocean, as it were. Tell yourself this equates “letting go”. That way you can look yourself in the mirror every morning and say, “I’m doing fine. I’m healthy. I’m surviving this”. But until it’s legitimately dealt with and truly set free in your spirit, you cling to things that make much less, logical sense.
  
And I realized that I’m one of those individuals who can’t handle it when people are mad at me. I hate it. I obsess about it. I need to convince them they are wrong, and that the situation must be reevaluated. This is “NOT letting go” at its finest! I just can’t do it. I can’t say, “well forget you! I’m never talking to you again!” Although, God knows I have done that many times to some of the most critical people in my life. I will then move heaven and earth to win them back. I can’t cut them from my life, poisonous or wonderful, it makes no difference. I can’t let that proverbial door slam, forever. It’s too terrifying. What if, god forbid, they don’t come back?
To this day there are people in my life that I want desperately to be able to say “enough is enough” and move on, let go. But with that goes the “what if”, the unknown. The security the relationship, in whatever capacity has provided.
  
I realized today it takes strength to let go. Strength that as of this moment in time I don’t possess, but that in time I know, will come.
   
The biggest test of all, I have passed. I have let go of the longest standing non-familial relationship in my life. Let go of someone who at one point was my partner, best friend, companion, husband and the father of my children. So if I can let that go, I can let go of anything. Right?

Perhaps I’m stronger then I think.
*this is an interactive blog, please leave your thoughts and I will respond 🙂

It’s Been A Year

It downed on me today that it’s almost been a year. I’ve almost made it through a full 12 months since my life began to unravel the evening of September 7th 2008. Tomorrow morning I will sign the papers. Papers that were filed nearly 12 months ago, the final step in a very long journey. A symbolic step, the one that like magic restores life to “pre-wedded bliss status”, I get my old name back. I’ll officially be a single women. I will be DIVORCED.

With the revelation of the looming one-year “anniversary” I realized there was another anniversary being celebrated, though it was probably toasted a month or so ago. Their ONE-YEAR anniversary. Yes, I can see it now, candle lit dinner, some sad country song playing in the background, him drunk on Makers Mark. Their glasses raised in a toast, to making it to that pivotal point in any relationship, the one-year anniversary.

Only he was married.

He had 3 very small children at home.

He had a wife.

A wife who on that night had run across the street to barrow the secret ingredient for the family’s favorite dinner “cowboy spaghetti”. He was late getting home. The kids had eaten, she had eaten. His dinner was kept warm on the stove and served as he walked in the door. The house was clean. Her make-up was done, clothes clean (no baby spit up in site). Freshly picked roses filled the vase in the center of the table, the house smelt of browning bacon. She wore her rings. He wasn’t warring his. She handed him his plate and a cold beer and sat to watch him eat. It was quite, oddly so. He was dirty from working all day, he needed a shower. She felt sick to her stomach but didn’t know why…exactly. Though her gut knew…exactly.

The water from the shower droned hard on the tub floor. Steam seeped out the top and bottom of the bathroom door. Suddenly she knew. She knew his phone was in with him. She quietly opened the door rummaged till she found it well hidden in his “to be put on clothes”. In that moment before she opened it, she knew exactly what she would find, who it would be from and what it would say.

The text message read:
“I can’t wait till your finally free…and you’re all mine..no more sharing “.

The world slowly creaked to a dead stop. She could feel nothing. She could not see. Could not cry. Could not feel her breath, was certain her heart had stopped. Felt light as a feather.

Quickly she returned the phone to its hiding place, and calmly walked to the living room to get her son. She lead him to the back of the house to watch a movie, gave him a snack and drink..said it was a special occasion so he could watch the whole movie.

Then without thinking, opened the bathroom door, threw back the shower curtain, turned off the water and said “get the fuck out of my house and don’t ever come back.” In the 10 minutes of confusion that followed, him frantically trying to get dressed, that’s all she could say. Over and over again.

He left that day. He never came back.

That was the moment that changed my life. Changed the lives of my children. It was 10 minutes of pure certainty, betrayal, heartache and agony. The following weeks I can remember only bits and pieces. So much is a blur. In those weeks it felt like the world had ended. Like the other half of me had died. Like I would never laugh again. Never smile. Never eat. Never pick my tear-stained face up off the hardwood floor.

It’s indescribable the way it feels to have your life forever changed in an instant. To say it was a shock is beyond an understatement, (I had only had the thought a few minutes before I found the phone). But somehow I just knew. It was over. There would never be a way to get passed it. They were in love he had already started a separate life with her, you don’t get beyond that. I don’t. I knew there was nothing left to say.

And now, I reflect on the past year. So much has changed. The pain and heartbreak quickly turned to anger and hatred. Then slowly that began to shift to tolerance. Then quietly, steadily became….peace. Peace is as much as I ever could of hoped for back then.

I realize now that everything truly does happen for a reason, and that on Sept 7th 2008, my life changed, yes. But it changed for the better. A year later, I’m happier then I have been in years. I have my most precious treasures, my three children. I have a great job, that I can honestly say I love. I’m independent, I’m making it happen. I’m in the best shape of my life, and my mind and spirit are in the right place.

I survived.

I made it to my one-year Anniversary.

I made it past the first Christmas, Valentine’s Day, Birthdays and Anniversaries. All the dreaded firsts are finally over.

So on September 7th 2009 I will go get a great bottle of champagne and alone, or with friends I will raise my glass and say:

“I made it! This did not kill me. This does not define who I am. After this I can take on anything, I am stronger than I ever imagined.”

I will send thank you cards to my friends and family for being the rock that got me through this.

I will send a thank you card to him…for letting me go, giving me my life back.

Cheers!

*we were married 8 years, together 16. High school sweethearts.

Carrie Underwood..”Just A Dream”
click here to listen to the song that sums up those first few days and played on loop non-stop in my head…

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8khHqMntkbQ

Beautiful Chaos: Just A Day In My Life

Its 5:00 am and one of my twins Izzy is patting my face with her blankie in hand, “mama baba”!! I stagger out of bed, scoop her up with a kiss and carry her to the kitchen to heat a bottle, unable to see through my sleepy eyes. I put her back to bed and hit my pillow.

I’ve barely made it back to a half-assed sleep when at 6:15am Mira does the same thing. By then it’s time to get up anyway. I stagger back to the kitchen to brew my coffee, which god knows I can’t see without. I hop in the shower coffee in hand, start 2 loads of laundry, pick up the house a little, pound a protein shake and get dressed, make-up can wait till I get to work.

At 7:00 AM all hell breaks loose as the kids wake up. They are either happy and loud, or fussy and really loud. The noise level instantly goes from “Namaste” at yoga class, to “It’s a small world” at Disneyland, in a matter of minutes. I set everyone down, scramble some eggs, heat some sausage, pour some “dip-dip” (ketch-up), and juice. All of which ends up in hair, clothes and the floor. I rush around cleaning and changing them one by one. I pack their lunches, gym bags, hand-bags and diaper bags. My arms are already loaded and aching as I hoist the girls up and carry them (35lbs each) one on each hip with the gear, down stairs out to the parking lot.

I’m a sight, nearly dropping it all as I reach the car. When I finally sit to start the car, my hair is a wreck, my black work clothes have ketch-up and yogurt hand prints, and I’m breaking a sweat! My son is desperately trying to get my attention, but everyone’s talking and fussing at once, fighting over “who’s song” I’m gonna play. Izzy usually wins with TI’s “Whatever You Like” (edited version, thank you!) and they all start bobbin their heads.

I drop the girls off at daycare first, packing their gear in, getting them adjusted to being left. Then I get a second of quiet with Kanen as we drive to daycare, stop for a cup of coffee so we can connect. Then I’m off to work running late.

I get to work and stress about all the work shit that is constant in a corporate sales job. I worry I won’t make my number and I’ll be fired. If I’m fired my kids won’t have food to eat, that quick. If god forbid one of the kids gets sick and needs to be picked up at daycare I have no choice but to cancel my day at work and go get them. I try every day to sneak out for an hour to go to the gym and get a work out in, if I don’t there is no other place I can fit it in my day.

Then I rush home after work, to scoop them up. Their hungry, fussy and tired.  I unload the car, put them back on each hip, and head all the way back up the stairs to my apartment. I’m in my work clothes and stilettos, trying not to topple over.

I make dinner as quick as I can, everyone is loud and I have a splitting headache. I haven’t eaten all day, with the exception of my gulped protein shake at 6:30 this morning. I just wish the noise could come down a notch and my son would stop making the twins cry.

Dinner is a disaster! The girls have applied most of it to the ground or the walls, and any remaining morsel is covering their little bodies. I have no time to eat, I’m getting cranky as hell. I pound yet another protein shake, hoping it will stop the jitters, take the fatigue down a notch, and ideally make me not want to extract my teeth with a bottle opener.

I strip the girls down and take them in for a bath, put a movie on for Kanen, tell him I’ll spend some quality time with him when the girls go to sleep.

After bath, I take them both out to dry but only have two hands. As a result of this unfortunate lack of planning on God’s part, I can only get one diapered and dressed at a time. The other one has decided she can’t wait, and has crapped on the rug. I put the clean one in the crib so I can clean up the mess, but she gets out to investigate anyway. They both now have shit covering their legs and hands, realizing this they begin to panic, wiping it off on my shirt. I try to clean them and their handiwork up at the same time, biting my lip to hold back the tears that sting my eyes and the overwhelming sense of I CANT FUCKING DO THIS! Panic.

Breathe Sarah.

Just Breathe.

When that’s finally done, and Izzy is changed and ready for bed, I go to the living room where Mira has gotten into my makeup bag and is putting lipstick all over herself and the white carpet. Really? I snatch my make-up bag and the contents of my purse off the ground, scoop her up and back to the bathroom we go. I hurry scrubbing her little cheeks till they are more red from the washcloth then the destroyed tube of Mac’s latest matte red. But I’m too slow and Izzy has opened the dishwasher and is breaking the wine glassed with a butter knife…just happily slicing the stems off with the innocent glee and delight only a 2 year old could pull off. Dammit maybe that’s my problem…she’s just barely 2!
No! Nooo! Nooooooo!!!!

This is probably the only word my children think I know.

So I’m busy getting that cleaned up, making sure there is no remaining glass on the floor, that I miss the fact that they are already busy in Kanen’s toy room and have turned over a 5lb bucket of micro logos and are watching them fly across the room. When I come to scold them, they both cover their eyes with their chubby little hands as if they can’t see me, I can’t see them

It’s impossible to be angry with them, because they are just curious and not malicious in their quest for trouble.

I can’t take it anymore.

Our 2 bedroom shoe-box apartment’s walls are closing in on my science fiction style. It’s time to head to the park, let them run around a bit, burn off some of this energy and redirect their boredom.
 
I change them back into street clothes (it’s 7:00 pm). I get them up to the park and all 3 go in separate directions, I try to stand in the middle where as needed I can sprint to grab one from launching off the big-kid slide or grabbing the other one from taking a header off the monkey bars. It’s visually interesting for all the other parents and they make comments watching me leap from spot to spot, still in my shit covered work clothes and heels.

When we leave I’m beyond exhausted.

I fantasize about a life long ago when I used to take bubble baths and drink red wine.

But I’ve promised ice-cream as a reward for their good behavior at the park, and I hand each of them a cone. When I pull in the drive I look at the twins who are covered. Their seats are covered, their blankets are covered, the windows and leather seats…covered. I try to mop them up with wipes, enough to at least carry them and the gear back up to the house.

Finally by the grace of god it’s bed time.
I’ve rewashed them.
Re-jammied them.
Sung their song.
Given bottles.
Rubbed tummies, and said prayers.
They are in bed.

I close the door and breathe for exactly one second. For the next hour the twins get out of their cribs, waddle into the living room, blankies in hand, wanting a “smoochie”, or to see what we are doing, or to say goodnight…I put them back, again and again. They finally start to crying in earnest even they are getting sick of this game and realize it’s time to raise the stakes, now they want a new song and tummy rub.

Poor Kanen my little 6 year old angle sits in the dining room waiting for me to join him in the promised game of UNO.  He kicks my butt, best 5 out of 7 games, my eyes are closing and my feet ache. I get him ready for bed, read a story, sing the song I’ve sung him every night of his life; Hush Little Baby. I rub his back, ask him how his day was and we both say prayers.

It’s almost 9:30 PM, and I way over shot the goal of everyone asleep by 8:00. I feel defeated and exhausted. But the house is finally quiet, though thoroughly destroyed.

I grab a glass of wine, and sit for just a second…But the place looks like it was hit by an ill-named tropical storm and will take at least an hour to clean. The laundry and dishes still need to be done, lunches and bags packed for tomorrow.

By now it’s 10:30 PM and I have time to check my work email, do some research, vet our new software site and plan for my day at the office tomorrow.

Thank god for wine!

At 11:30 I’m finally ready to try and sleep. Why is it that when you need sleep the most it evades you like OJ did the police…so annoying.  
~Written by Sarah Centrella for Thoughts.Stories.Life
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