More on the subject of truth

After I wrote the last six people twelve times post, I immediately wanted to delete it.

It was incredibly hard for me to write, and also incredibly hard for me to allow others to read how I feel. How I truly, deeply feel about a subject. Especially about a subject as emotionally charged as parenthood. I am scared that when I truly share how I feel, no one will understand, and I will be alone.

I am not, nor have I ever been, a very private person. I am an open book. In person, I have no problem sharing personal anecdotes even with a stranger. I don’t take myself very seriously. I rarely get embarrassed. I have nothing to hide. I operate below the surface, meaning I don’t want to bother with small talk. I want to dig in and talk about THINGS. Too Much Information? Never. Not with me. I want to really know the people that come into my life. I want to be a safe place for them, so that they allow me in. And I am a lot of the time, and they do a lot of the time. I think it is what allows me to take the photographs I take.

A lot of people just feel safe with me.

The problem is, I don’t often give myself the same safety net of myself. I have operated most of my life perpetually worried about how I come across. How others see me. I have obsessed for hours after a party about the things I have said or not said. I have chosen not to walk on a busy street alone, for fear of the eyes on me as I cross a busy intersection, and what they may sum up about me from a split second. I have chosen not to stand up for myself or my children, at times, to different authorities (medical, educational, etc), because I want to believe in them, I want to belong, and because I doubt myself. I have put others over myself and my own opinions and thoughts more times than I can count. I have held back on my opinions on politics, religion, child rearing, family, alternative medicine, organic food, vaccinations, the list goes on. Personal anecdotes are one thing – personal opinions and feelings are something entirely different.

I have always tragically walked the line of being extremely confident in who I am, to doubting every single little thing I have ever thought. I remember going into ninth grade, and after having to wear glasses since the third grade, finally being old enough to try contacts. Back then, kids in glasses were teased or bullied. I was teased and bullied. Mercilessly, almost every day of my school education up to that point. Not just about the glasses, but they certainly didn’t help my situation. When my Mom offered the contact route, I remember saying, “No, I don’t need contacts. I like how I look in glasses. If anyone thinks I look like a dork, I don’t care.” Well, I desperately didn’t want to care, but of course I did. The only way I could gain some control was by saying “I’m choosing to wear these stupid glasses dammit! So screw you if you don’t like it!” The only way I could make myself feel better was to fake that confidence. I fully bought into the adage: Fake It Until You Make It. I just thought someday I would make it!

The tag line I chose for my business, “Just Be You”, is so much more than a tag line. It came to me in the middle of the night, many many years ago. It is a flashlight through the dark into the deepest part of my soul – it is me telling me, “It is okay Tara – just to be. Just be whoever you are. The important people won’t care about the messy bits, the ugly bits, the opinions that differ from theirs – they will love you anyway.” It is my mantra, my meditation, my mission statement. But often, it eludes me.

Here on my blog, I talk specifically about a lot in my life. Like I said, I am an open book. A lot of beautiful personal anecdotes are written here. A lot of talking about the other five people who live in my house. But not a lot of talking about me. About my personal opinions. My personal feelings. Also, here on my blog, I have always limited my focus to one thing: Happiness With A Capital H.

When I started this blog, I was being treated for depression. I started it for two reasons. One was to keep in touch and share photos of my children to our far away family and friends. The other was to help me focus on the good in my life. To try and help me realize I had a reason to live, and exactly what those reasons were. It worked. I started seeing things I hadn’t noticed before. I started writing about things I hadn’t noticed before. I started photographing things I hadn’t noticed before. And many of you reading this now were here, reading then.

It has been five and a half years since I started writing and focusing on all the good in my life. I am no longer being treated for depression. I have fought hard and won that battle. To those of you still in it, my heart goes out to you with deep empathy. My specific depression had a lot to do with the choices I made early in my adult life, and why I made them, and on the slow steady drain of mothering four small children all at once. Three years ago I decided I was done with medication and the side effects. After six plus years on and off anti-depressants, I wanted to see what my new baseline was. I slowly, sickly, painfully weaned off with the help of a chiropractor. She helped my body come off the drugs and she continues to help me stay healthy and balanced. That was enough for awhile, but soon the depression and hopelessness began creeping back in. So, I began going to therapy. And my life changed. She helped me realize the why of my depression. And how to move forward with all of the pain and knowledge that comes along with that.

She also helped me to realize that I am doing myself a disservice by only focusing on the good.

I want and need to focus on the truth of my life.

Meaning, I don’t have to change what I am doing – I just need to round it out with a good dose of reality. I need to be able to look and ponder over the good and the bad. The happy and the sad.

I do not want this blog to be a place where people come and then leave, feeling depressed over my ‘fantastic life’. Possibly thinking that I have no suffering. That I make no mistakes. That I have no bad days. That I don’t fail. That I’m not a jerk sometimes. That I look cute every day. That my family is perfect. I only recently came to realize that this could be the case. And if this sounds familiar to you, let me just say to you: I AM SORRY. I am sorry I haven’t realized that it is equally beneficial to show you both sides of my life.

All of my focusing on the good, the happy, the sunshine moments – what I did to make myself feel better – was actually a fantasy I was clinging to, and I was leading other people to believe was my only reality. The fact is, I do focus on those moments. They are truthful. I have never made anything up. I do tend to “look on the bright side”, “see the silver lining in every cloud”, and “drink from my half full cup”. But when that is all you, my reader, gets to see – you never get the full picture. And when that is all I, the person living it, choose to see, I can’t see my whole life the way it actually is. I can’t make changes or see problems. I can’t help someone like Mckenna. The day after I posted a truth like the one I am currently struggling with in regards to Mckenna, I could see that. You got a bigger picture of my life. *I* got a bigger picture of my life. A more truthful picture. We all have our unique struggles. We aren’t alone. And that was a big exhale.

I have felt a shift occurring within me for some time, of me not wanting to sit on the fence of who I am any longer. I have made a lot of changes since I started this blog. And yet, I have kept what I write here pretty static. Pretty generic. Pretty focused on the good. The Happy With A Capital H. Today I hope to give you a much more full picture of who I actually am, right now.

So – here is where I slap down some truth. I think I do have a pretty fantastic life. The life Jeff and I have made has a lot of good. And I write enough about that, that I don’t need to get specific about it now. But I also have a lot of suffering, I have a lot of bad days, I constantly make mistakes, I am totally a jerk to people sometimes, and a lot of days I don’t even shower or brush my teeth. I forget things often. I have a double chin and large pores. I get really sweaty when I am shooting. (One of the only things that actually does embarrass me about myself.) I am sixty pounds overweight. Mckenna has visually disturbing scars on 20% of her body, caused by catching on fire in 2005, and caring for them, and her, takes a lot of work. Some days I wish my kids would disappear so that my house would stay clean and I could have a break. My house is almost always messy. I don’t really have many local friends. I feel lonely a lot. But I am learning to like that loneliness, and learning what to fill it up with that is good for me. I wish I had paid more attention in all of my History classes, Geography, and Economics, because I am a dolt when it comes to those subjects. I make up for it now by being extremely curious and learning as much as I can about the past, and the history we are making today. I voted for Obama, although I don’t think he is the cure for all of our problems. In person, I curse like a sailor and have quite the naughty sense of humor. I just don’t necessarily feel that the internet is the place for me to express that. I cringe inside when I hear the name George W. Bush. I support gay marriage, and feel that the LGBT person is equal to me in every way. I am not religious. After having been kind of “half-religious” most of my life, (Episcopalian, then Christian, then Mormon), my belief system is best understood by reading this, from the American Humanist Association.

If any of those things surprise you, or make you no longer want to read my blog, I understand. And not in a glasses versus contacts way. I really and truly understand because it means you have the full picture of who I am, and you are free to make a choice. I respect your choice. I would hope that this wouldn’t change how you feel about me. But I understand if it does.

And something I didn’t go into on that last post. I didn’t get specific enough about what I was dealing with. My daughter Mckenna has an undiagnosed neurological disorder that causes her to have major agitation over simple household noise, major issues transitioning from one thing to another, (even something as simple as getting out of the car), and obsessive compulsive tendencies. She is unpredictable in when she will melt down, but melt down she does. And often. In a meltdown she screams, she will try to take off her clothes, she will lay down on the ground. Often in public, right where people have to walk around her. She will stop everything she is doing, like a stubborn horse you can’t get to move an inch. You pull and yank on the reigns and plead and beg and they just dig in their heels. So does she. She will yell curse words. This started in middle school – she doesn’t know when not to curse like the rest of the kids. (Around teachers and parents.) She has zero social or safety awareness. She has no idea people like their space, and will walk up to someone and touch them inappropriately as she says ‘hello’, or ‘hi, dude!’ She has no idea that she could get hit by a car in a parking lot. In 2006 she left our house unannounced twice, and took off on foot. One time before 6am, when everyone else was asleep, the other time when the kids were playing outside and I was upstairs folding laundry and didn’t realize she had left. Both times we were frantic to find her, and were lucky we did. After her second attempt, we purchased a $300 personal GPS system that she had to wear for months. If she got more than 10 feet away from the base, her bracelet would ring an alarm. A lot of the time, her safety is out of my control, and I live in fear of what may happen to her next. She is intellectually disabled with some autistic like symptoms. We don’t know why and we probably never will. It isn’t for a lack of trying. She is fourteen years old and we have taken her to the doctor to try and figure her out countless times.

One of my friends emailed me something that I thought was so poignant, and I want to share what she said here:

“I think what I love most about this post is that it rips away the curtain.  This fancy curtain that is put up for everyone to see how perfect and beautiful it is on the outside, but if you push back the curtain you get to see what’s real, what’s raw.  You get to see the truth.  And guess what…the truth isn’t all that and a bag of chips sometimes.  And I think it is in these moments of complete honesty that humans can truly relate to one another.  Perfection is an illusion….And the sooner we as parents push back the curtain, the better off we’ll all be.  Because there is comfort in knowing that we are not alone in this situation, that people can relate in some fashion.”

I am so ready to rip away the curtain, and in doing so my hope is that I find even more people that I can relate to, as well as that can relate to me.

Just be.

xo

Tara

Join the Conversation

522 Comments

  1. I am sitting here, trying to fight back the tears. I feel like I have witnessed a transformation of some kind. The greatest thing you could ever possibly do for yourself and your family is love yourself…and in that post, I witnessed you love yourself unconditionally. It was a beautiful and sacred experience and I am so proud of you!!!!!! I know, for certain, that all of your truths? Well, they made me love you even more. I share so many of them. And with Mckenna, while I cannot personally relate to her exact situation, I have experienced my own set of gutting truths that are long-standing and very difficult to deal with. You being real about it? It helps me breathe about my own issues. I know you didn’t write this to be patted on the back. But, by dog, I seriously wish I could bear hug you right now! Lovelovelovelovelove. You are beautiful and I think you are one helluva wife.mother.human being.

  2. Tara, I’m sitting here with tears in my eyes. Please know that there are many of us tired of keeping up the facade of happiness and *everything is perfect, I’m fine* when we are, in fact struggling. I kept a smile on my face through divorce, single-parenting and the long months after the death of my mother. But recently my friends, my true friends, get to see the real me. The one who isn’t all butterflies and rainbows. Shocking to me, they are okay with that and they still love me. We still love you too. I’ve been following your blog for quite awhile and you never cease to amaze me with your intuitiveness, your joy in life and your boundless spirit. Good on you for being truthful about what must be a really difficult situation sometimes. I’ll be thinking of you. ;)

  3. Way to go Tara!! I just recently started reading your blog but I too think it’s wonderful to show the whole you. Life gets tough and speaking out about it makes not just you…but us too feel better about the way we live and parent.
    Thank you so much for being so open and honest here.

  4. Thank you for sharing this. I was definitely one of those people who frequents your blog and thinks “what an amazing life/family” and feels a little jealous. I still think you have an amazing family and are quite talented. However, I feels so much more comforting to see that you are a “real” person and are right there in it, like the rest of us. Being both a teacher and a mother, I always wanted to know about Mackenna, knowing it can’t all be easy.

    Like everyone else who have commented on this post, I admire your courage to talk about the things we normally avoid. And believe me, we all have things about ourselves that we wouldn’t want the world to know! I’m inspired to share more honestly on my blog and I hope it does the same for others.

    Thank you!

    P.S. If you ever want to make a new friend, I live pretty close to you!

  5. I think focusing on the positive is a good way to live but of course letting it all out is helpful too! Sorry you are having such a tough time….I get lonely too being a SAHM…thank goodness for the computer and I used to spend a lot of time scrapbooking which I have sort of dropped temporarily. Again, I will say, you are very strong and amazing…even if you cry in a heap everyday….you are strong and amazing! and your photography rocks!!! I have learned so much studying your photos! Thanks for the constant inspiration!!

  6. I adore you more today than I have ever have and I honestly didn’t think that was possible. (I have been a HUGE fan since your early scrapbooking days.) Sending you more love, hugs, support and laughter (I swear like a sailor too) than you could ever think was possible. : )

  7. Tara, you don’t know me, but I sure do feel as if I know you. I’ve been reading your blog and admiring your work for such a very long time, but I’ve always felt that you were untouchable, because you are such a talented, beautiful person. I’ve always been shy about commenting on your blog, because I was sure you’d be like… “who is this girl I do not know that is commenting me?” But you ARE so REAL and that is so very admirable. I feel like you’re a close friend, yet we’ve never met and you wouldn’t know me if you passed me on the street.

    You are incredible and your ability to be so open is just uncanny. I love the person you are and I love learning from you. Both as a person and as a professional. Keep being you. You are very good at it. :)

  8. Thanks for being “real” and sharing your story. The words that come to my mind when I read this are strength, courage and honesty. You embody all of these things, and more.

    “You never know how strong you are until being strong is your only choice.”

    “Courage does not always roar. Sometimes it is the quiet voice at the end of the day, saying “I will try again tomorrow.”

    Hang in there…and don’t give up hope. “When the world says ‘give up’, hope whispers ‘try it one more time’.”

  9. fear not tara…i think there are more people than not that share alot of your (for lack of a better word) tendencies…i am one…you are not alone…keep on keeping on-you are a beautiful person :)

  10. Tara,

    You and I go back (cyberwise, lol) for a long while…back to scrapbooking days and Two Peas. I started reading your blog from day one, when McKenna had her accident. I feel in love with your spirit, style and talent then. I remember sending my best friend (who killed himself last year) an email about you…about how I had a huge girl crush on you and though you totally rocked.

    I have had nothing but pleasure watching you grown and change and all the great things that have come into your life.

    And, no, I never once thought your life was perfect…is perfect. I appreciate you being worried you made readers think you were and feel perhaps less themselves…but seriously, it was a needless concern. Those of us who “know” you, realize the big picture.

    You’re simply a lovely lady with a huge heart, lots of love and talent…who cusses as much as I do apparently.

    Keep it up girl.

    Love as always.

  11. I’ve been reading your blog for a while now and have always loved it – now I love it even more….I love how raw and open you are….it’s like a breath of fresh air. You’re right, some people have blogs where they give the impression their lives are perfect, which makes you feel like yours is even more imperfect. I wish I was more open and honest on my blog as you are on yours – it’s a goal of mine to strive towards. Thanks for this post! You have a loyal reader in Philly:)

  12. As a person who has struggled with my own religion, issues, and the way I am perceived, I think that the phrase that best conveys my wishes for you and yours is: Peace be with you.

    The one thing that I have noticed in my life and the people in it is that being real is attractive. It draws people in and gives you confidence. Thanks for setting that example.

  13. Long time “lurker” and admirer of your photography – thank you for your honesty, and pulling back the curtain. I think we all feel a lot of what you’ve expressed. You are a wonderful mama.

  14. i. love. this. completely & utterly LOVE this. i know that everyone has their own personal struggles, battles & scars… but this totally resonated with me. so, thank you. thank you for being REAL and exposing so much of your SELF to all of us. for being able to say “this is ME” without apology. you are an inspiration, honestly. i LOVE your style (shooting AND living), and love to read your blog. i’m a local… so if you ever find yourself getting TOO lonely, look me up. i’ll make time. oh, and ps… thought you might like my own tagline, so thought i’d share: “because it’s real life. it doesn’t have to be perfect to be beautiful.”

  15. Double chin, large pores, sweaty? Curse like a sailor? We could be twins! Your posts lately have felt like they are speaking to me personally. Lately I’ve felt horrible for wishing the rest of the family would leave me alone for a week so I could keep the house clean and watch what I want on TV, I felt like I must not love them the way that I should. So hearing you say it validates it for me. I know how hard it must be to post those things and worry what people think but I think you will find that it only endears you to your readers. The people who only show the good side of their lives makes us wonder what they are hiding…

  16. we are the same except for the part where you voted for obama hahaha!

    tara, i really love you! i had a sick feeling in my gut when i started reading your “truths”. sick because there are so many things that you and i have in common in life and i know the pain that it causes inside of me…the physical kind of pain that i hate to think of you having. i hate that you have to suffer. what i really want you to know is that if i was still in brea i would be at your house right now to squeeze you. i literally feel a physical need to squish my body against yours so that you know that i heard this…heard you! i know it sounds weird and it looks super weird typed out here but it is the “truth” and how this post made me feel.

  17. The last few post have been so touching. I am sure you are bringing comfort to many as well as yourself by sharing these experiences. I am truly fascinated by how we evolve emotionally as women through out the different phases of our lives. Motherhood, careers, friend, daughter, sister, wife…we have a lot of outfits to wear and they are not always cute. I hope you continue to share as you navigate and evolve through this phase of your life. I have a friend who’s daughter at was just diagnosed with PANDAS (basically an unpredictable strep infection in her brain). She has progressed from OCD and some tics to full on psychosis. She has been battling some pretty harsh real feelings about parenting. I really think your story will touch her. Thank you for sharing, even though it was hard.

  18. I love photography, but something about your work has always just stood out to me like no other photographer I have seen! And after reading this blog and your previous blog I realized why I Love your work. Your blunt, honest, to the point, REAL and some of what you wrote I could see the same things in myself. I would totally want to hang out if I didn’t live so far away :)

  19. After I read your last post, I went back and looked again at your “six people twelve times” photos. It was then that I really paid attention to all of you and saw everything different. I can see the truth through your pictures now that I know more about you. I see the happiness and the uneasy. It is art.. your pictures tell this truth but most of us cannot read it through the images. Thank you for sharing what is in them by opening your heart…You have been more than strong and like all of devoted mothers has the difficulty to allow yourself to just say out loud your feelings. But writing gives us so much freedom to do it. You have the gift to put in words what the feelings are. Please, keep sharing as so much more people will relate and you will touch their lives. You touch mine.

  20. Another great and honest post. The whole “happy, happy, joy, joy” (Ren & Stimpy I believe) you get from some blogs can wear on me just a bit. I love a little real – honest – warts and all posts mixed in to keep it real so to speak. Thank you for sharing.

  21. I’ve loved your photography for a long time. I’ve enjoyed reading your blog for a while and always liked your writing. Everything you just shared only cemented for me that listening and seeing your creative expressions are things that of course I would want to continue to do. As a scrapbooker and photography enthusiast I follow a lot of blogs and admittedly don’t agree with every thing that each of those individuals believes. So it is immensely refreshing for me to hear you express political or human rights beliefs that I also believe in. It is also refreshing to hear another mom say her house is messy and she makes mistakes. So many women in one spotlight or another want to portray perfect images of themselves for varying reasons, but I think your friend is right about making connections based on the fact that no one is perfect, that we all have struggles. Maybe if we all come clean there will be less of a perfect standard that we will hold ourselves up to.

  22. This post made me cry (in a good way). After your last post, I sat down and wrote a post on my own blog that I had been avoiding because I too wanted to only show the happy part of my life. But being open with yourself and letting other people in makes it that much easier to actually have a happier, more fulfilling life.
    I hope things are easy more often than they are hard because you’re good people and deserve all the happiness in the world.

  23. I have so so much to say to you know, so much to say to this. It is amazing how much of myself I read in this post, and how much of the person I would like to see myself become.

    I’m only eighteen, a baby really in the ways of the world, but I already feel like I’ve learned that honesty, while sometimes painful and raw and hard, is the best way to live. Honesty teaches us something, grief and pain create an opportunity for transformation.

    Like I said, I have so much more to say and will be sending you an email shortly to share it all. Wishing you all the best, from the bottom of my heart and all the way across the country.

  24. SOMEbody is a-mazing. Yes, it’s you! I like the genuine blogs; can’t stand the “happy, sunshiny, everything is perfect” blogs. Now I love your blog about a hundred times more.

  25. GOOD FOR YOU!!! I was just commenting to a friend how I’m tired of reading how “PERFECT” everyone is, how “PERFECT” their clients are etc on blogs, FB, & twitter. NO ONE has a perfect life, no one!!

    It’s ok to be human, we all have ups and down, I know I do. Being another deep soul, I suffer from depression and have been med free for over a year. I try to remind myself it’s ok to feel sad something, but then you have to pull your head outta your ass and get it together! I have clean drinking water, my life could be a lot worse! ;) I make myself laugh, as a reminder, people see what I look like but they can only get a feeling for who I am, when I feel I am who I am.

    xo

  26. Tara, if your photos are amazing, the way you express yourself is more than amazing…
    Your words are so powerfull….you have another gift !!!
    Love your blog more than ever
    You are a very special person
    I used to wish to have my family portraits made by you
    but now I wish we could be friends !!!

    All my love for you and your lovely family !!!

  27. Thank you so much for these past two posts. Your ‘realness’ shines through even stronger. And I love it. You are amazing in your openness and honesty. I wish I could tell you what these posts have done for me. For my heart and for my soul. I look forward to more of your truth. I love truth. Even when it’s difficult. Sometimes more so when it is difficult…because it seems to be harder fought for and therefore more precious. May your truth and realness continue to shine through your posts and through your photography. And thank you for sharing both with us.

  28. I have many things in common with you that I didn’t know about before but I have to say I would still be reading your blog even if our politics/background/religion/etc were different…because we are all just people and pulling back the curtain is such a good & brave thing to do. Thanks for keeping it real. ♥

  29. You’re amazing.
    I wish we could sit down and share life experiences. I wish you were my BFF!
    You aren’t perfect. Your family isn’t perfect…but it is perfect for you.
    Thanks for letting me in!

  30. everything you just wrote is so me. I’ve been sitting on the fence of who I am for a long time. Playing it safe. I needed your words, they are echoing in my head. Thank you.

  31. I’m a huge fan of yours, period. I’d like to think that if I still lived in southern California that we’d be friends. I’m not a big reader, in fact, I’m not sure I could even tell you the last book I read or when that was. I say all of that to encourage you to pick up the book “ragamuffin gospel” by Brennan Manning, its life changing. A reminder from a recovering alcoholic ex-catholic priest that we are loved as we are and not as we should be, because we will never be as we should be. xo

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.