Seven Days

Life Patiently Waits For Us

Seven Days ago, I wore a dress to work, the curly mess that I claim is hair actually looked great for once, and oh I had cute shoes on too, I looked date ready without even having one on the books. Good thing I looked date ready, because an email led to a text, which led to a date. Sweet, I thought I won’t even have to head home after work to change, go me! The universe was working with me today, double sweet!

However the parking Gods of UpTown were not on the same page as the universe, I drove around aimlessly looking for a stupid spot. Finally after 15 minutes I found one. During this time I contemplated just giving up and going home, however I am a woman of my word and well I had to get my date on.

You never know what type of people you are going to meet off the interwebs. They could be crazy, so shy that they don’t speak, or absolutely normal. Lucky for me my date was normal. The minutes ticked into hours, one drink melted into another and the conversation flowed naturally. This never happens to me ever, I always get the ones who don’t talk, have phobias, or just talk about how buff they are.

This one was different. Different in a good way. Travel stories were swapped, he asked me if I read books (um of course I do), I explained what twitter was and well of course my blog. This blog to be exact. He muttered the tittle of my blog into his memory so that he could check it out. Very cute I thought. So as the night drew on, my smile grew a little wider and I kept on thinking, this never ever happens to me ever, a normal guy, for a ninja like me. As any polite gentlemen would he walked me to my car and asked me out again.

Again on my short drive home, I kept thinking this never happens to me ever. It should be known that most men who read my blog, run. I don’t know why I guess I just have too much kung fu or something. The Irs Auditor didn’t run, he embraced it and continues to read it. (hey there’s a lot of info on here). Saturday went great, better than I had expected. On Saturday he proclaimed “I can’t believe I just meet you 48 hours ago, it never goes this well for me.” I thought to myself “Ditto on that one”

Seven days ago today I was sitting at The Independent having a cocktail with a stranger and had no big expectations. Today he isn’t a stranger, he now has a hashtag of #IrsAuditor on my twitter feed and endless conversations ensue.

April Showers Bring Memories

It’s funny how a scent, a song, or a simple word can send memories crashing through. Tomorrow will be April. A month filled with showers, sun, and warm days. Yet this month is weighted with memories.

If I were still married April 3rd would be a night of dinner, wine, celebrated love and laughter. That was the day I met my x husband, it would be 6 years on Sunday. Six years ago he walked across the campus parking lot and into my life. Part of me wishes I could say it was all terribly bad, but it wasn’t. We had our moments and our days in the sun. He probably won’t give April 3rd much thought this Sunday, or maybe he will. For me, it will just be another day on the Calender, yet it will always hold a place in time.

April 9th will be a day I will always remember, that is the day I found out I was pregnant. At first i thought it was a joke and then the words pregnant appeared over and over again on the seven tests I took. It was real all right. That night the x was beaming and couldn’t contain his excitement for our pending joy. Scott would talk to my stomach and kiss it Good Night, Good Morning, and Good Afternoon. That night we went out to celebrate at one of our usual spots and when the waitress asked if I wanted my usual glass of wine. He piped up ” No wine for her, she’s pregnant!” The waitress gushed and congratulated us both. Our families were filled with hope and exploding with joy for their new grandchild. Never during that time did I think God would burst our bubble filled with joy. Not even once did I dare to think it could all fade away. Yet it did, it did in deed.

As a child my mom told me that rain, just wasn’t rain. That it was magical, that the rain was actually tears from heaven. That some angels were having a bad day or they were sad because God Brought someone home. That if I embraced it, danced in it, and jumped in the puddles I could feel the angles love. April, bring on your rain……I am ready to dance in it, laugh in it, stomp, frolic, and embrace the tears of heaven.

Punching Snowmen

Like most ladies I have had many a dating blunders and days where I just plain gave up. It seems that when we give up fate finds its way in and allows us to look a little further and a little deeper at the fish in the sea.

Recently I punched a snowman. (not really) In doing so it led to a string of emails that ranged from dogs making dinner, to uptown hipster pigeons who mumble about oppression, and to my favorite subject ninjas. The emails eventually led to a date, a great first date to be exact, that led to an even better second date. I know crazy right two dates in 3 days or as he would say 48hrs. I am glad that I punched that snowman, because if I hadn’t the IRS Auditor would never of walked into my life.

At this moment I am going to consider myself lucky and take down all of my personal ads. I am throwing caution to the wind, moving my thimble on the board and I am going to follow it through to where ever it may lead.

So maybe ladies the key to finding a datable man is to punch a few snowmen. After all it has been a long cold, bitter winter, so go on and punch one.

You Are Worth It

I was recently asked to speak to a group of disadvantage women and motivate them to better their lives. Below is what I told them:

First, I want you to know that each one of you are worth it. It doesn’t matter what you did in your past, or where you came from, because today is a new start. You are a little wiser and older than you were yesterday, today we are going to find your inner ninja and let her fly!

I have been where you are. I know what its like to feel like the world is against you, to be in love with a man who just brought me pain, I’ve had those days were I couldn’t find the strength to go on. Let me tell you, my 27th year on this planet was the worst year of my life. Here’s why: 1. I almost died 5 days before my 27th birthday. 2: I was in love with a man who felt the need to emotionally and mentally abuse me. 3. My child died, nothing hurts more than losing a child. 4. I got divorced.

Many of you are recovering from drugs, alcohol, and lets just say the motions of life. I’ve never had a problem with those things. So now your probably wondering, huh what can she offer me? Just know that we all have our struggles, for me it was breaking free from an emotionally abusive husband. I realize now that walking through my child’s death gave me the strength to walk away from the man I claimed was my husband. That if my child hadn’t died I would still be in that house where his whores were more important than his family. I know what its like to be cheated on, lied to, and what its like to be told that I am not worth the ground I walk on.

I had to leave my marriage in order to find myself again. I remember the first time someone told me I mattered. I cried right at dinner. It had been years since I felt like I mattered to someone, damn it felt good. Struggle is a word that often lands at the back of my vocabulary, I don’t like to admit that I struggled, struggled with realizing that I was worth it. I know each of you are struggling, it’s a never-ending battle. Society will knock us down, what matters is that we get back up, and ride that horse out-of-town.

I want you to know that you matter to someone in this world. No matter where you go or what happens outside of this room. Know that a big-hearted small town girl from Minnesota BELIEVES in YOU and that YOU MATTER TO HER. I believe that each of you holds the power to change, to stand for something, and make this world a better place. When I was down, my friend Lisa would send me texts that said: ” I believe in you. You matter to me. Take my faith until yours is renewed.” Little did Lisa know, I was hanging on to her every world, that she was my strength, and she got me through the darkest hours of my life. I want to do for you what Lisa did for me, I am here for you, I will be your strength as you heal, you can borrow some of my faith until yours is renewed. You will find my number, email, and twitter on the back of my card. Don’t be afraid to call on me, I am here for each and every one of you. YOU are worth it to me and know that I have mad love for all of you. I don’t know you, but know that you are loved by me, that I believe you are all ninjas!

Do you ladies know what Ninjas are? I am not talking about the guys in black suits throwing chops and kicks. I am talking about that voice deep inside of you that takes over when your mind cant and pushes you through to the next day. Each one of you has a ninja deep inside. You need to harness that power, find her, and let her fly. Trust me she will never steer you wrong, when you don’t think you can go on, rip out that suit and slip it on. Remember that you are worth it and that you matter to me!

Now go out there NINJAS and show this world your Kung Fu!!!

You Are What You Give

I am a firm believer that we get back what we put into this world. I am not going to lie, I have no idea what it is like to go without, go hungry, or struggle in life. I came from a family who was blessed. For the longest time I thought every family had two homes, a classic car in the garage and 3 other cars in the drive way. My parents came from large families, where they were seen as farm hands not children, they came from nothing. Both knew that there was a better way and that their children would never go without.

Yet, they always taught my sister and I that there are people out there who are struggling. They taught us the power of giving and that no matter what happens in life you need to give back to society. To be thankful to God for the life we led, for the Calvin Kline jeans on our tush, the nikes on our feet, and the ice cream cone in our hand. They were always giving, giving back to our community. I firmly believe that this is the greatest lesson they have ever instilled in me.

I am grateful and blessed, I’ve seen god work in my life. The bible says that Jesus is going to come back someday. Indian people believe that the spirits visit us and test our worthiness. They don’t come to us in a clean-cut form, but in the form of a mother in need, a child so hurt they can’t see the sun and the homeless. In my life I have never turned my back on anyone who has asked or needed my help. I will be damned when my life is done and I find out that I turned my head away from Jesus or the spirits.

Some of you drive by the people holding signs at the top of the exit ramps on your way home and don’t give them a second thought. I keep dollars on me just for them. They may be professional beggars, if they are then well they are the ones who have to answer for it in the end. I figure if you are out their holding a sign you are in needed and if I can give you a little bit, then I’ve done my part to help you out. You may not notice the huddled mass hiding in the shadows when you walk down town. If you do you think to yourself, it’s not my problem that they are on the streets. Did you know that most of our nations homeless are war veterans, men who were long forgotten when the last bullets rang through the jungles of Vietnam. These men suffered to free a nation, war it is an evil thing, yet these men strapped on their boots and fought for their country.

I once handed a man a cup of coffee with a twenty in it and pointed him towards the mission and gave him some dog food to feed his friend. I said go get warm, he looked at me and said ” You are a sweet angel, but why should I go get warm when they won’t let my dog in? They will take me and send him to the pound, he and I we are in this together.” Right there at the top of the 35th street ramp on 35w, I cried, this man so broken, so cold,but wouldn’t warm himself because it was unfair to his dog. I can honestly say I saw god at work that day. We hugged and I got back in my car. I haven’t seen him since that fateful below zero day.

I try to see the good in everyone, maybe its a fault that I have. I don’t believe that people are evil, or bad, they just do stupid things. I stand for children, maybe it’s because mine rests in heaven, so I’ve become a protect of sorts a mentor to these broken hearts. Every friday night you can find me helping non custodial parents try to build a bond with their child, in the safety of a supervised visitation. I get to see moments, be a voyeur on their lives, help them be the parents that God knew they were capable of being. Mentoring brings me so much joy. Do you know what its like when a kid calls you up and says “I got into college! thank you for believing in me, for telling me I was worth it!” Every time I get that call I cry tears of joy with them. There are so many children that don’t feel that they are good enough or matter. Those kids they matter to me. I believe that each one of them can change the world and that they stand for a better day.

Imagine what this world could be like if we all just cared and believed in one another. Imagine the good that we could do. It doesn’t matter how busy you claim you are, we all have to take a moment and be present in the lives of others. Whether it’s giving a sign holding man a dollar, opening a door for a stranger, or telling a child they matter. Just do something. Every morning when I wake I have one goal, and that goal is to make a difference in the lives of others. Will join me in that goal? Just imagine what you can do for someone else. You don’t need to do something big, just do something small and grow your heart wide open, until you inner ninja bursts through.

Divorced Life Dating

I decided that after my divorce I wasn’t going to jump into a relationship right away. That I wanted to feel the pain and be alone, so that I could truly heal, and not be influenced by another man.

This fall I dusted off my dating shoes and did what any single woman does, I joined one of those internet dating sites. Sure I got phone numbers from friends, blind dates came and went, yet I wanted to start this journey on my own. I havent been single since I was 19, that’s almost 10 years worth of relationships.

My oh my have the dating rules changed in the past almost 10 years. What ever happened to a first kiss on a first date, I didn’t know that I would be expected to streak into Home plate on a first date. I had a guy who asked me out on a date, it went great and he’d asked me to a second date. I said sure why not, then I got an email laying out his expectations for the night. In which he spelled out I want sex at the end of the night, don’t come if you aren’t going to put out. I felt offended and thought how rude. Not to mention the guy was only 5’6″ so I chalked it up to little man complex, but to the men of the interwebs have some class, some style, and for god sakes not every woman on the planet is going to drop her panties for you.

Besides Mr. I want you to drop your panties right now, there has also been phobia boy. Right there at the Urban Bean he laid down his phobias, water, heights, and automatic cars? I can deal with the water and heights, but come on now automatic cars? He said he didn’t like automatic cars because well he couldn’t control them. Needless to say I gulped my coffee down, burnt my tongue in the process, and bolted out of there like a whore leaving church. I didn’t call him back, I don’t do phobias.

So between phobia boy, Mr Drop your panties now, and well then there is Ring sting. So this man assured me no I am not married, would never do such a thing. Well then if you aren’t married why are you wearing your wedding ring. The look on his face was priceless and then he said ” My wife will never find out.” Oh she will I said, my x thought that too! An when she does find out there will be hell to pay. That date lasted 10 minutes.

So I am starting to wonder what the heck happened to men in the past almost 10 years? Did you all get dropped on your head, did some sort of rule get established regarding home base must be achieved on a first date. Oye, I say men, men have turned into quite the animals.

I guess I will throw some salt over my shoulder, a penny in a well, and wish on a star that not all men are home base achieving pigs. It true the nice guys always finish last, no one, not even me, likes a full of himself winner.

One Clot Changed My Life

It seems in life that we never care about a cause until it directly affects us. If you would have asked me about blood clots and pulmonary embolism back in 2008, I would have laughed you off and said “that only happens to old people.” Working for a prescription benefit company I had seen the drug names, warfarin sodium, coumadin, lovenox, and heparin millions of times. I’m sure I even complained when I had to take the extra steps to get the costly medications covered under someones plan. In my mind I had always pictured these people as 80 year olds who had heart problems, strokes, and who knows what. I just always said to myself, I am going to be healthy so I will never need those meds.

As fate would have it almost a week to the day I left my job at the big pharmacy benefit management company in 2009, my life was depending on the very drugs I had sold and fought to get coverage for. There I was, the picture I had built up of these sick old people was suddenly shattered and lay on the emergency room floor. I was suddenly depending on these drugs to save my life. I lay there on the maternity floor of woodwinds health campus with a Heparin drip, my blood constantly checked, and doctors telling me welcome to your new normal. My new normal would be living as a survivor, they said “you should be dead” and ‘Your 26 this isn’t suppose to happen to girls like you.” Well it did, it did in deed, and I wouldn’t trade that horrid experience for the world.

Its March or should I say National Blood Clot Awareness Month. A month that lets the world know that hey people survive these things and heck look this just doesn’t affect old people. I guess I am supposed to celebrate and be a beacon of hope for those who are just starting on this twisted journey we call survivorhood. So, as a survivor I feel obligated to advocate, to lobby, and to live for those who didn’t. To make each day worth it and make each of my days matter, because they mattered to someone.

Over and over again I am told how lucky I was, that I cheated death, I don’t believe in cheating, I believe that God still sees something in me and believes that I can help you save your life by sharing the warning signs. Every life, every story matters, and maybe mine will bring you comfort or save you in ways you never imagined.

But please take time to remember, like I do each day, that thousands of people have died from something that can be prevented. Every second counts, every moment matters when you have a clot.

Please help me spread the word and prevent blood clots in those you love!

Dinner on Sunday

Once a month my friends and I get together for a Sunday evening dinner to catch up on life. In the dim light of the News Room I looked around the table at my friends, all happily married or deeply in love with their current mate of the moment. We grew from a group of 20 somes without children to having beautiful babies nesting table side. I thought to myself in this moment I am so lucky to have such amazing friends, all are ninjas in their own right. Of how accomplished we became and that everyone succeeded in their dreams.

My not going to law school is something we never bring up, along with my failed marriage among other things. Instead we sit around and swap old college stories, stories of travel, of loves won and lost. Until someone brings up the question “why are you still single? Normally I can change the subject in a quick pace, but this balmy February night they weren’t having it. They truly out of the kindness of their hearts wanted to know why.

The pressing and teasing continued, I gulped my wine, looked at them and said well loves, “it’s simply by choice.” I think in life sometimes we need to be alone with our own thoughts and feelings before we can truly move on. That we ourselves need to realize that we are good enough on our own. That sometimes vanilla is better than maple nut. Do you know how it amazing it feels to sleep smack dab in the middle of your bed and not have someone complain about it. An dam it if I want to eat ice cream for breakfast, or leave clothes on the floor, mess up the covers I can. Because no one is going to say anything about it, I am going to do it.

I am simply leaving my heart open an not looking. I have faith that when the time is right, Mr. Right will waltz into my life and things will be grand. But right now I like being alone, I can do what ever I want when I want and I love it. Its me and the dog until death do us part. He is the best guy I’ve ever had, he’s loyal, likes to go for walks, never complains and sticks to his side of the bed. So please I know you all love me very much but realize that at this moment in my life I like who I have become and where I am headed.

After I finished my soap box moment, the table was silent, I looked up and realized that tears were sparking in the candle lights. My lovely bunch of misfits were crying. That is the most beautiful thing I’ve ever heard you say, that’s our girl, she’s back, and I love you were exchanged. We made a pact that night, that from here on out at Dinner on Sunday we will no longer ask why are you still single. Because the answer is so beautifully clear.

BECAUSE I CAN BE!

Let Your Ojibway Fly!

Someone asked me the other day “What is it like being a young biracial woman in todays modern world?” I honestly didn’t know what to say and I was puzzled. When I think of me my whole being the first thing that comes to my mind is my whit, not the color of my skin, or my racial back ground.

One thing I do know is I come from a long line of strong women and men who fought for what they believed in. They believed that one day they would not be judged by the color of their skin, their creed, or called a dirty Indian as they walked the streets. My Great Great Grandmother was Chief Sky Woman, one of the few female Ojibway War Chiefs. She ruled over Madeline Island, people came to her for advice, she protected and fought for their survival.

Her daughter my Great Grandmother Geneva Grace would suffer, endure, be relocated, assimilated, and worst of all the Government would steal her children away in an attempt to get her land. The land that he mother was buried on, a land she had called home, and raised her children on. They succeeded, they bought her land for $5.00 and a bus ticket to Minneapolis. They told her that this was a new day and a better way to live. When Grace got to Minneapolis she was told that her children had died in transport. She didn’t believe them, she searched, went to the police, yet no one cared, she was just some old Indian. Grace could feel that her children were alive, she never gave up, one day she would see them again.

While Grace moved on, her children were becoming “white” they were beat if they spoke their tongue, their hair was cut, buckskins were traded in for uniforms. Best of all they were told “if you pray to your savage God, you are going straight to hell!” My grandfather at 5 years old had no idea what Jesus was, all he knew was that this thing called a Bible was now his god. That little 5-year-old boy, was sold to a man in Lake City Minnesota for $500.00 and he was no longer called Red Squirl, he was to be called Clifford Raymond Palotee.

Even thou my grandfather had been raised white, he knew that this wasn’t the way and started to question this so-called man. Mr Palotee, told him the truth, told him where he came from, and that he was an Indian bought during the relocation period. Armed with his real last name Clifford set out searching. He made friends with the souix indians and they showed him the way. One day a call came, his daughter had found his mother.

Grace never gave up looking for her children, she was reunited with her son Clifford when he was in his 60’s, her child had finally come home. Her daughter June was living in Arizona, her oldest son Walter was in California. This woman who fought who suffered and endured, could finally wrap her arms around her children. She was whole.

I am reminded of Chief Sky Woman, Grace, and my Grandfather every day, they are my connection, a link to the past. To a culture so rich that it will set your heart on fire. because of them and others like them I am able to stand here today. My GrandFather was able to mary an Irish woman, and have 13 children that stand for a better day. A day where no one is judged or ridiculed based on their skin color.

Yet we have traveled so far, yet we have walked so little. When I go out to the reservations to motivate the youth to go to college, my heart is broken. Its like stepping on to a third world country, the Government has yet to deliver on their promises, people go hungry, violence is prevalent, and shacks stand as homes. Yet somehow this is ok. It’s not ok, we owe these people something, we are standing on their land and the only time we care or turn an eye is when a Casino pops up.

For me being biracial, means standing up and using my voice to make a difference. I made a promise to Dot five years ago: that I was going to attend law school and make a difference in Indian Country. I am holding on to that promise as I know a 98-year-old woman out on the Padowadamee Reservation is holding me accountable, that she believes that I can change the world, one day at a time. The elders hold out hope that the seventh generation of Indians and mixed bloods will change the world, that we can make it a better place. I intended to make good on my promise, as for me I come from a long line of innovators, chiefs, and judges who never backed down. I will not back down either, as we say Indian Country “Let your inner Indian fly!”

I will not be Knocked Down

If you had told me that my birth control would almost kill me, I would have laughed you off and marked you down as crazy.

Many many women do this. They don’t think twice when they pop the pill, insert the ring or inject their veins. Some ask their doctor for the IUD, they cast a side the warnings, side effects fall to the floor, as we are women and we have a right to birth control.

Women came before us, to fight for our reproductive rights, but did those women of the 60’s know just what this pill they were fighting for would do? That it would ruin lives, tare apart families, leave victims, unanswered questions, and broken hearts. Some say birth control was the greatest thing to ever happen to and for women. I say they were wrong.

OBGYN’s write thousands of scripts a year for the pill that promises to keep motherhood at bay. They do little to educate, to warn, or even deter a woman from taking the pil, the ring, the shot, or an IUD. I know I was never told that the my choice of control was the deadliest birth control on the market, that it scared, marked, and destroyed women’s lives.

When the ring and I met it was convenient love. A love that would come crashing down and leave me fighting for my life. I never thought twice, they said blood clots only occurred in women over 35. Hell, this is a ring it doesn’t know age, gender, weight, it’s a thing, an object, and not some intelligent machine. It lay quietly in a cup, this thing so small, so meek, yet it roared through my body with a dangerous thunder, and has left me forever changed.

I did not wallow or look for pity. I stand for change and I would be damned if another woman met my fate. I am the first woman ever in the state of MN to file a product liability law suit against a pharmaceutical company that manufactures a hormonal contraceptive. My case will be precedence, it will pave the way and make the path for other broken women to follow. Backing down is not an option, lobbying for stronger warning labels and stricter product testing is. Is an option, to stand up and fight for what I believe in.

This is America where anything is possible, where no woman deserves to die because of her birth control.