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

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522 Comments

  1. I don’t think I could say much more than many of the comments above. There are differences among us, but yet so many things are similar. Pulling back that curtain lets in more light…and reveals your honest beauty.

  2. Amazing – you are! I never knew and never would have guessed what is going on in your family. I am happy you are being more of the real you and letting the truth out. Be brave!

  3. well miss tara. It’s you. raw. real and perfectly imperfect. It was just what I needed to read. I have been feeling this same way..static blog…I hope this inspires everyone to rip off the cutrains to their “fantastic lives in which they are so blessed” the “i love my job, i am so lucky” posts that I have grown so tired of. and be real. love you friend. see you soon.

  4. I like even more. I like everything you said and feel the same way in many of the same areas. I am proud of your honesty and suspect that every mother of a child with disabilities feels the same way you do. We are all fragile humans looking for our place and trying to make sense of our situations. Being able to say it as beautifully as you just did, is freeing and brings people together. You may have removed the veil, reveling your personal thoughts, but it made you more accessible, more real, more human, more beautiful. Well done. Thanks for letting me in.

  5. pushing back the curtain. This is what I am going to remember when I feel like I need to be doing everything just right. being a mom would be so much easier and so much more rewarding if people just realized this. thank you for being so truthful, it really makes an impact.

  6. When you speak your truth, you empower other people to dig deep within their souls and speak their truth. Speaking our truth is one of the most powerful and inspirational things we can do for ourselves and others. It is terrifying, courageous and so totally freeing! It is about letting go of the control that we grasp so firmly that it starts to suffocate us. Let go, trust in the universe that everything will work out. Thank you for being you, just as you are! Thank you for inspiring others to seek and speak their truth because the truth shall set us free of the walls we put up, the untruths we hide behind, the personal hells and dungeons that we imprison ourselves in every day! Much love and light to you and your family!

  7. i feel like i have just been set free. free to be imperfect. free to be messy. free to be bitchy. free to be sad. free to be happy. free to be me.
    oh. my. god. the emotions are flying.
    i have spent all my life trying to be what i thought other people wanted me to be.
    is it really okay for me to be messy at times?
    to not brush my teeth some days?
    to not read to my children everyday?
    to be stained by rape?
    These are the things i have been ashamed of for years. And i finally realized it is okay. None of these things are the person I really am. Thank you.
    I love you tara. though we have never “met” i think of you as one of my friends.
    Thanks for being YOU.
    Ria

  8. Your honesty and courage is so amazing to me. I’ve been following your blog for a while and McKenna seriously fascinates me. It’s amazing how the brain works and hers works in such a specific way. No I’m not a doctor or scientist. I’m just a SAHM. Thank you for your truth and much love to you and your family.

  9. Thank you for this post. Much love to you and your family. You are such a beautiful, smart, honest, caring and kind soul. It shows in every picture you take and every word that you write. Thank you for sharing and ripping back the curtain. I love being allowed to follow your journey.

  10. I think you are amazing, more amazing than before! To know you are not only real, but can show that to everyone and have faith that it will all be ok, is truly beautiful.
    If I was standing near you I would give you a hug, even if it was a bit weird, as I don’t know you! But you give people permission to let it all be ok, and that is very cool xx

  11. tara, you are an amazing person. i just want to thank you for being so truthful. for showing everyone your real life. i don’t know if you understand how much that means to everyone, and especially me. i am 20 years old, i have been reading your blog for three years now and i didn’t think i could admire you more but you proved me wrong with these last few posts. you are an amazing mother and you will find the right things for Mckenna and all of your kids. i believe that. so thank you again for this. you are the best.

  12. I freakin love you. You make me laugh, cry, and FEEL! Isn’t life awesome?? :) I love your analogy about operating below the surface. I don’t do surface either. You have such a gift with words and photos. What a great combo. Thanks for sharing!

  13. We have so much in common it is weird…right down to the sweating at a shoot. I often have to tell people that while I look like I might be dying…I am in fact just a sweater :) Yes, very embarrassing…I have learned to embrace it by not wearing makeup or making too much of a fuss over my hair :)

    Good getting to know you…i have NEVER stopped reading a blog I love because the person writing it is being honest. How silly would that be?

  14. Tara, I have been a huge fan for years…stalking your blog for pretty pictures and interesting posts….thank you for sharing your thoughts! I love love love that you have never tried to pretend like you’re perfect! You share it all…that’s what makes people love you and want to be your friend! I am saving my pennies in hopes of getting to have a session with you one day! YOU ROCK!

  15. I think we can all relate in different ways. There is never a balance and your perfectly imperfect philosophy clearly goes beyond the beautiful images. Life is always a challenge! But definitely worth doing! What a wonderful mom you are!

  16. Kind of knew you weren’t perfect just because such is life. I find you talented, funny, and if girls ever become not so icky to me I think I might want a wife like you…. quirks and all.

  17. Thanks for sharing this Tara. You are so true on people only writing about the happy/perfect moments on blogs and so (although I never have find that about your blog). I can imagine people feeling depressed about that. But life can’t be like looking cute everyday and have the funniest and cutest kids every day. I don’t have a special need kid so I can’t relate, but I can imagine how hard it can be from time to time. Sending you all the strenght you need an just be you! :) Your pictures are always awesome though (at least the ones you show :) )

  18. thank you.
    thank you for opening yourself up – it takes courage to be so honest and transparent.
    Don’t be afraid to show who you are – it reminds us all of the humanity inside us and gives others the courage to do the same.

    As I read your words, I was struck by how similar we are – so many of your words rang true to me and sounded like a page from the chapters of my own life.
    You are not alone. Individual, unique, sometimes lonely…but never alone.

    Many blessings to you this day….when all things are possible.

  19. Tara. U r a beautiful person inside and out. I have been reading your blog since the beginning and there is nothing you could write that would make me want to stop. When I had to cancel our session last year ( we had a family trip planned to LA and Disneyland) I was struggling w so much and still am. We are all human. I was sad then to miss the opportunity to meet u in person ( I saved the little note u sent!) and hope to some day in the future. Xxxooo

  20. love you. love that you put it out there, and that you CAN. Look how many friends you have now… (but I know how that feels. that lonely. too.) Now excuse me, I gotta take these dorky glasses off and finish bawling a while.

  21. Tara,

    This post has been one of your most beautiful, I always struggle with how mu h of myself I should share on my blog. Your honesty and openness has been so refreshing and has helped me to see is what really matters is the truth of who we are not the picture that we try to paint. I too, like many women constantly feel less than or not good enough and this post helped me to see as long as I don’t let those feelings consume me and recognize that doubt is a part of the process, I will be just fine.

    Thanks Tara for just being yourself.

  22. I keep typing a comment here and then deleting it. I don’t know why. Probably the same reason that I’ve only commented on your blog a handful of times though I’ve been following you for years. From the moment I found your blog I’ve felt like I knew you, and I have wanted to tell you that sooooo many times, but I never have because I know I’m not the only one, and I kinda feel like a celebrity stalker for it. :) But hey, you’ve inspired me today, so here I go. Get a restraining order if you must.

    I just love you, Tara! I love love love love love you. :) And I’m not the only one. I’m assuming that most of these hundreds of other people who are commenting on your blog today haven’t met you either, and yet they seem to love you too. :) You ARE real, more than you must think. I can’t speak for everyone else but I have never been under the impression that your life is charmed or perfect. I feel like the reason I’ve fallen so in love with you and your work and your writings is BECAUSE of the real-ness, the acceptance of and unconditional love for the flaws, the imperfections and truth in life, and love. You inspire me, not because you have it all together. But because you don’t. None of us do. There is no such thing as having it all together. What there is, is being good at hiding not having it all together. But that’s too much damn pressure! Who wants that?! I am 28 years old and feel like I’ve been in hiding my whole life. The past two years, something has shifted inside of me and I’m trying desperately to peck through this shell I’m in. It’s exhausting, painful, and terrifying. I was even more disheartened when I realized that it would not be an event, but a process. But I know that the price and pain of hiding is far worse than that of being free. It’s just that the pain of hiding is familiar, so we cling to it.

    Today you gave me new strength to keep going, keep pecking. Thank you. xoxo

  23. You are not alone. You write what so many of us feel. Maybe not the same specifics, but some. That was a beautiful post, so honest and real. I have read your blog for a long time. I haven’t seen it all as “Happiness with a capital H” all the time and that’s what keeps me coming back. You are real. Just Be You. Many good wishes to you and to all of us. Hugs… :-)

  24. Tara, you are brave and honest and I love that. Blogging is so difficult for me because I am such a private person, but you show me there is something so human in putting it all out there for the world to see. It is rather not like the prison I imagine it to be, it is a freeing of your mind, thoughts and person. You give new perspective. Reading your blog is so much more than looking at beautiful images, and I appreciate that. Thank you.

  25. it took me forever to scroll down here, through all the love coming your way, to get to the comment spot.

    your truth is beautiful, as you are, however flawed you think you may be. i see a bit of myself in you, besides the fact that we have 4 kids. i’m sure we’d be fast friends if we lived near each other.

    love to you & yours

  26. Thank you for being so unbareable honest. I know how hard that can be. I had a mother who was always depressed and then committed for a 4 month stay. Remeber that in the moments where you cannot find the strength “that this to will pass”. You are very courageous! I had a friend with a child with simialr issues they used a part time facility. Where there son would be with them part of the time and at the facility the other part of the week. He enjoyed the school and it made great progress for him to his noraml adult state. I understand that his normal and others are very different. It worked for there family. They to had other children, once my friend got over her own guilt it made sense of their lives. I hope that you find what works for your family. Most people do not realize the choice you have to make and what will and will not work for your family. Those choices are difficult and come with there fair share of pain. We all have it it is just in different form! I pray for peace and understanding for you and your family.

  27. what an amazing, amazing post. One of my pet peeves about the scrapbooking mags is that it’s all rainbows & butterflies 99% of the time. But it’s not real. It’s just a narrowly focused lens, and we all feel like failures when we’re presented with that.

    Your therapist is right – mine taught me that all feelings need to be given space. You have done that beautifully – your honesty is breathtaking. I have a son with autism and it is so hard at times – your last couple posts have resonated with me big time. You can see that by putting yourself out there, you weren’t judged. You were welcomed, and I am absolutely sure that you helped to heal a great many kindred spirits out there.

  28. Oh miss tara. I know it took a lot to write that, to expose it all. Truth be told, while I do see the happy side of you on the blog, I guess I always figured you had this side going on too. How could you not? So it’s ok, we know everything can’t always be sunshine and roses and you shouldn’t feel guilty for trying to look at the happy side of things. Being a momma is likely the hardest thing we will ever do in our lives. And with sweet mckenna, infinitely harder than many of us will ever know. Just know that you’re amazing. Every part of you. I can say that even though I’ve never met you. I just know. And by the way, I totally agonize for hours after talking to people about what I said too.

  29. I didn’t write a comment about that post – but I loved it! I think I was a little scared, I wondered if my future might hold any of these … “struggles” that you face with your daughter. This year, I gave birth to my fourth child (I have a 9yo girl, 5yo boy, and 2yo boy) – a little girl, Zoey, and she has down syndrome. No one can tell me how “severe” it is or how it may affect her, only time will tell … no matter, she’s a blessing to us and I clearly realize this. I appreciate your honesty and your pulling back the curtain – it’s hard to do, I know (I like to be an open book on my blog as well – but certain things are so scary to put to print) but I think it usually is a positive experience. I have read your blog for a good five plus years now and have watched your children (and your business) grow and it all amazes me – I initially began reading it because I felt like I understood your photos, they were different – much like how I photographed my children (with a super crappy camera and a severely lesser amount of skill, of course) … I continue to read it because, even if I didn’t have such an intense interest in photography and photos, I’ve “fallen in love” with your family the same way viewers fall in love with reality families on tv! You’re an inspiration … we may view the world and much of what’s in it differently OR the same – doesn’t matter much in the long run. Thank you Tara.

  30. Thank you Tara for ‘pulling away the curtain’…You are an amazing person! John & I felt completely comfortable with you when you took our pictures 3 years ago…I wish we lived closer so we could do it again! You have a way of capturing people, their relationships, and the moments – it’s such a gift! I do the same thing and really only show the good – My life is wonderful & I’m thankful for that – but there are rough patches along the way and it happens. Be strong – and – be you! Hugs!!!!

  31. YOU ARE AMAZING! I am also a cup-half-full girl. So, I can totally relate to how you look at the world. Like you, I often edit my opinions I guess because I don’t want to start some heated discussion that might bring out the worst in me or someone else.

    I am a republican, but I voted for Obama. I am Catholic (not a good one), but I am pro-choice and pro gay marriage. I definitely believe in God but I don’t believe that I have all the answers or know the “right” way to be spiritual (how could I–I’m only human). I am a teacher yet I hate the union and its negative effects on education. Probably only a few people in my life know all of these things about me (sometimes I feel like a chameleon). Like you, I want to be more forthcoming, so why am I afraid,I am a good person.

    I guess what we are all discovering is that people are multi-faceted and like diamonds we would not be beautiful without all of our life experiences to carve us into who we are. I so appreciate your courage. You have prompted me to give a lot more thought to my own life and how I choose to live it. THANK YOU!

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