Life Lessons

How many have you learned?

The other day, one of my Twitter or Facebook friends linked to a blog post titled “10 Life Lessons People Learn Too Late.” I clicked over to it and gave it a quick read. And I realized two things:

  • I had already learned many of these life lessons.
  • The lessons I’d learned defined who I am and how I conduct my life.

(I also realized that while I’d already learned most of these lessons, my soon-to-be ex-husband had not. In thinking this over, I realize that this was part of the reason we’d grown apart over the past few years. I was motivated by many of the the lessons I’d learned in life; he was not. (Actually, I’m not sure if he was motivated by anything.) But since there’s nothing to be done to help him, enough said.)

In this post, I’d like to explore these ten life lessons, how I learned them, and how they affect my life. Maybe it can provide some insight for people who still need to learn. I won’t duplicate that blog post here; you should read the original either before or after you read what follows here to fully understand what the author was talking about. I’ll just list the first line of each bullet point as a discussion heading.

1. This moment is your life.

Carpe diem. This reminds me that I really need to re-watch The Dead Poets Society. Seeing that movie might have been when I first became familiar with the concept of “seizing the day” and making every moment count.

What does this mean to me? It means not wasting time with meaningless crap when you can be doing something better. The opening lines of one of my favorite Pink Floyd songs, Time, comes to mind:

Ticking away the moments that make up a dull day
You fritter and waste the hours in an off-hand way

Don’t get me wrong — I don’t make the most of every moment of my life. I don’t think anyone can. Life is too full of the piddly bullshit that we need to do just to get by. Not every moment can be perfect, something worth remembering forever.

But understanding that each moment of your life is your life is the first step to having a better life. And if you approach each moment with that in mind, each moment will be better.

2. A lifetime isn’t very long.

Time
Ticking away the moments
That make up a dull day
Fritter and waste the hours
In an off-hand way

Kicking around on a piece of ground
In your home town
Waiting for someone or something
To show you the way

Tired of lying in the sunshine
Staying home to watch the rain
You are young and life is long
And there is time to kill today

And then the one day you find
Ten years have got behind you
No one told you when to run
You missed the starting gun

And you run and you run
To catch up with the sun
But it’s sinking

Racing around
To come up behind you again
The sun is the same
In a relative way
But you’re older

Shorter of breath
And one day closer to death

Every year is getting shorter
Never seem to find the time

Plans that either come to naught
Or half a page of scribbled lines

Hanging on in quiet desperation
Is the English way

The time is gone
The song is over
Thought I’d something more to say

Time lyrics © Universal Music Publishing Group, Kobalt Music Publishing Ltd., EMI Music Publishing, Sony/ATV Music Publishing LLC, Warner/Chappell Music, Inc., T.R.O. INC.

I always knew this, but the knowledge of it didn’t become a driving force in my life until 2008. That’s when my friend Erik, at age 56, was diagnosed with cancer. Erik had everything going for him — a family, financial security, and a helicopter business he really enjoyed. But a year later, Erik was dead.

What did this teach me — in no uncertain terms? Not only is life short, but it can be taken from you at any time. Why would anyone put off life goals to some later date — or retirement? Erik never had the opportunity to retire. If he’d put off any life goals until then, they were goals he’d never achieve.

If I had to make a list of the top 10 things that affected my life, Erik’s illness and death would be on it. That’s how profound it was to me. From that point forward, I began thinking about how I wanted to enjoy the rest of my life instead of working my ass off to save money for a future I might never see. I turned down book projects that I didn’t want to work on. I got my spending under control so I wouldn’t need to work so hard. And I started planning a future that included plenty of leisure time to travel and just have fun.

As for “bucket lists” — well, I don’t believe in them. Although it’s nice to have an idea of the things you want to do, building a long list of “things to do/see before you die” so they’re stored for some vague time in the future is pretty silly. Want to go skydiving? Do it this weekend. Want to see the pyramids? Plan your trip for your next vacation. Keep your list short by crossing off things on it as soon as you can.

3. The sacrifices you make today will pay dividends in the future.

Wow. Does this one ever hit home. I learned pretty early on that in order to move forward, you had to pay dues — or make sacrifices. Just coasting along wasn’t going to help you get ahead in life.

Sacrifices come in many forms, but for me they usually come in the form of time or money. I’ve made many investments in my personal life that have paid off for me.

I bought my first decent computer in 1989 for a whopping $8K and spent hour after hour teaching myself to use it. That, combined communication skills I already had (through time spent reading and writing) made it possible for me to make a good living teaching others to use computers — in classrooms and in books and even in video training material.

I spent thousands of dollars and many, many weeks of my life learning to fly helicopters. I took a low-paying tour job in 2004 to build experience — when I could have stayed home and worked on various book projects that paid out fast. The experience I built made me a better, more confident pilot and helped me get the skills I needed to build my own charter business.

And over the past five summers, I lived in a trailer, parked on the dirt so I could be close to my cherry drying clients and their orchards — when I could have stayed in a more comfortable condo or even stayed home, satisfied with the occasional hot summer charter. The good service I provided to my clients earned me their respect — and more business.

These are just three examples. I think my life is full of sacrifices — along with their eventual benefits.

4. When you procrastinate, you become a slave to yesterday.

Although I’m often guilty of procrastination, I understand how completely idiotic it is. If you have something to do, do it. As soon as possible. You’ll be glad you did when it’s done.

Maybe I’m being dense, but I don’t exactly get the “slave to yesterday” concept. When you procrastinate, you simply add more things to your to-do list. It’s only by doing things — not procrastinating — that you get things done. So my lesson in procrastination is that you can get a lot more done when you don’t procrastinate.

5. Failures are only lessons.

This is another really good lesson that a lot of people just don’t get.

Too many people — and I can name a few that have touched my life — are too afraid of failure to attempt some things that can take them forward in life. I am not like that. In fact, I’m the opposite — sometimes I simply try to do too many things.

My record speaks for itself. I’ve succeeded at many of the things I’ve tried to do: building three successful careers, getting published (back when that actually meant something), investing in real estate, building a helicopter charter business, learning to ride motorcycles and ride horses and fly helicopters. I can list dozens of things I’ve tried and succeeded at.

But I can also list plenty of things I tried and did not succeed at. Being a landlord is one example — it was probably the most grueling and unrewarding thing I ever tried. Failing to do as well as I wanted to was quite a learning experience. I learned that residential real estate is a bitch to rent, that good tenants are few and far between, and that certain tenants need you looking over their shoulder all the time just to make sure they don’t trash your place. I also learned that it simply wasn’t worth the headaches to me.

There’s no reward without risk. In other words, if you don’t try to do something, you can’t succeed. I live by this creed. And I’ve learned that sometimes success has all kinds of great rewards.

But the main point is this: even when you fail, you learn something that you can use to guide you in the future. Failures are lessons.

6. You are your most important relationship.

This particular point refers to feeling good about yourself and not needing anyone else’s approval. I learned part of this lesson — I’ve been my own person for a long time and don’t really care too much what my peers think of me. I have a lot of confidence in my capabilities and, with confidence, comes self-esteem.

Unfortunately, however, I did care what my spouse thought. And since he apparently didn’t think very highly of me in the final days of our relationship, my personal self-esteem took a bit of a beating which, in turn, began to affect my health. Once I was away from him at my summer job, I was able to recover. (And now I obviously don’t give a damn what he thinks of me.)

Still, this is a lesson I need to remember on a go-forward basis. Living a relatively isolated existence — as I am now, waiting for my life “reboot” to finish so I can start the next chapter — makes it easy to forget my self worth.

7. A person’s actions speak the truth.

Sad to say, this isn’t something I learned until recently. I can thank my soon-to-be ex-husband for teaching me this one.

For most of my life, I’m afraid I was very trusting. No — I was too trusting. Silly me — I thought that when someone told me something, it was the truth or that they actually meant it. And when it was someone I’d been living with for 29 years — well, how could I possibly not believe that what he was telling me was true?

But the actions did speak the truth. When I discovered the betrayals, I learned the real truth. Needless to say, this was a valuable — although painful — lesson. I’m a lot more careful about who I trust now. And there’s one person I will never trust again.

8. Small acts of kindness can make the world a better place.

How can someone not know this lesson?

You’re walking up to the post office door, arms laden with packages to be mailed. Someone walking by — not even walking into or out of the post office! — changes course to open the door for you. A small act of kindness. Doesn’t it make you feel good? And don’t you think it makes the other person feel good when you say thanks?

Or you’re in the supermarket and a vertically challenged woman is having trouble reaching something on the top shelf of the aisle you’re walking down. You offer to get it down for her, she accepts, and you hand it to her. A small act of kindness. Don’t you think it makes both of you feel good?

These are tiny things. But they really make a difference. Do ten of these things a day and you’ll feel great — while making others feel good, too. The world can be a better place.

9. Behind every beautiful life, there has been some kind of pain.

Until recently, I felt “blessed.” Mind you, I don’t mean that in the religious sense. I just mean that throughout most of my life, things have gone very well for me. It wasn’t luck — I worked at it and made a lot of good decisions. But it mostly worked out and things were good. You could argue that I had (and still have, for that matter) a beautiful life.

I guess I shouldn’t have expected the run of good fortune to last forever. Things are different now. Losing the man I loved was a huge heartbreak for me, one that I’m still struggling (with professional help) to deal with. There’s a lot of pain in my life right now.

There’s also been some pain in the past. Losing loved ones, including cherished pets, leaving behind parts of my life that I wished I could retain.

But pain is part of life. If you’re fortunate, the good times far outweigh the bad.

10. Time and experience heals pain.

This is something else I’m just learning now. My grief counselor would argue this point — she’s given me a “workbook” full of exercises to help me deal with my loss and resulting pain. But I do believe that time and experience are the primary healers — as long as you’re open to be healed. I’m getting there.

What Do You Think?

Which of these lessons have you already learned? How did you learn them? How do they affect your life? Share your thoughts in the comments for this post. It would be interesting to get a good discussion started.

Maria 1.0, In Photos

Going through some old photos brings back memories of a former life.

While I was away this summer, my husband gathered up huge bunches of my things and stored them in boxes or cabinets, likely to keep them out of sight. Among these things were photographic prints and slides. Unfortunately, some of them ended up in cardboard boxes that he put in my hangar; a summer flood destroyed everything left on the hangar floor — photographic keepsakes and so many other papers and books are gone forever. Others were spared destruction by being simply crammed into a cabinet or box and mercifully left in the house.

I’m going thorough these photos now. I’m finding mostly vacation photos from years and years ago — the 1980s and 1990s. I used a film camera back then and usually shot print film instead of slides. (My husband was dedicated to Kodachrome.) There are also some aerial photos from our aborted attempt at providing aerial photography services. Most of those are trash.

But I’m also finding a few random photos taken from way back when — in the days of what I’m now calling Maria 1.0. That’s the version of me from birth right up until the point I started my relationship with the man who would later become my husband.

I thought I’d share a few of the Maria 1.0 photos with readers. Keep in mind that these are scanned from very old prints, so the quality and color is somewhat questionable.

College Days, with my Cat

The date on the back of this picture says June 1981. That would be about a year before I graduated. This is me with my first cat, Fig Newton (or Figgy). It’s probably in my summer dorm room. By 1981, I’d moved out of my parents home and was living year-round at Hofstra University. I worked for Facilities Management and, because I had a job all summer, I could stay in the dorm rooms at a reduced rate. Figgy wasn’t legal to have as a pet, but that didn’t stop me. He was just a kitten here; he eventually did grow into his ears.

Maria and Figgy

I didn’t start wearing contact lenses until the fall semester. And it wasn’t until about two years later that I finally got fed up with long hair and started wearing it short.

As for the cat….well, when my future husband and I began living together in 1984, I had to find homes for him and the second cat I’d gotten not long afterward. My husband has asthma and is allergic to cats. Giving up Figgy and Rover was the first of many sacrifices I made for him.

Rooftop, Seeing Double

I got interested in photography when I was in my sophomore or junior year. I even dated a photography student for about a year. I had an Olympus OM-10 35mm camera. You could probably consider it an entry level SLR. It certainly had limitations.

But even back in those days, knew how to work around limitations. The image here is the best of only a few examples of a double-exposure shot within the camera. In other words, I shot two images on the same film frame. By masking one side of the frame for one shot and the other side of the frame for the other shot, I was able to create a double-exposure that shows me on both sides of the photo. (Of course, nowadays a shot like this is easy enough to make in Photoshop.)

Seeing Double

This was done on the roof of the apartment building I lived in in Hempstead, NY. I lived there for about a year and half, right after college. It was on the border of a nasty neighborhood that occasionally had shootings. But it was all I could afford, so that’s where I lived.

The dress I’m wearing is unusual. It’s actually a long, wrap-around skirt. I discovered that if I fastened the waistband under my armpits and put a belt around my waist, I could wear it as a dress. This is one of the many items of clothing I made for myself back in those days. I was pretty poor and couldn’t afford to buy new clothes, so I made them.

The date stamp on the back of this photo is December 1983, but I suspect it’s either a reprint or I just held off on getting it printed. No way I’d be on the roof in December without a jacket. The year is probably right, though; 1983 is the year I met my future husband and I know my hair was wild from a growing out perm back then.

Asleep in his Arms

I guess it’s appropriate to end the photo show of Maria 1.0 with a shot from the end of that era. When I met the man I’d share 29 years of my life with, I was only 22. Odd as it may seem, back in those days it wasn’t unusual for me to fall asleep in his arms, often on a rock or some other hard surface outdoors. The first time it happened was at Montauk Point, where we’d gone very early one morning to watch the sun rise. Afterward, we lay together on one of the big flat rocks making up the breakwater and fell asleep. There aren’t any photos of that, but this shot from later in 1983 reminds me of that morning, too.

Asleep in his Arms

Back in those days, we did a lot of outdoor activities with friends. I’m pretty sure this photo was taken at Lake George in the Adirondack Mountains, possibly during a Columbus Day weekend trip. I remember taking the gondola ride up Gore Mountain and hiking down to enjoy the fall colors. I vaguely recall being there with our friends Bennett and Marion, who also met that summer and later married. One of them must have taken this photo.

I really miss the guy in the photo.

How I’m Doing

And what I’m doing.

I haven’t been blogging regularly lately. There are a few reasons for that. I thought I’d cover them — and bring readers up to date on where I am and what I’m doing — in this blog post.

There’s a lot here — including lots of pictures. It starts off kind of glum but works up to happier news. If you care, stick with it. If you don’t, skip it.

My Broken Relationship

I may as well start off with the cause of my wishy-washiness and general lack of motivation. I’ll try not to whine too much. You can skip to the next heading if you don’t feel like reading about the current state of this huge failure in my life.

If you read my “29 Years Ago Today” post, you know that my husband and I are splitting after a relationship of, well, 29 years. Although I saw it coming, I guess I was fooled a bit by him claiming (repeatedly) that he wanted to try to patch things up. So it was a bit of a shock in late June when he announced, almost out of the blue, that he wanted to throw in the towel.

I think it’s this shock that’s causing me the most grief. Trouble is, I can’t understand what triggered his sudden decision. And I simply can’t stop myself from trying to guess what happened.

And no, he won’t provide a satisfactory explanation. Communication is not one of his strong points — hence the cause for the split and my surprise at its suddenness.

I’m a pretty independent person. This is my fifth season living alone in Washington State while I work my cherry drying contracts. Before that, I spent plenty of time alone at home, at our vacation property, and at his Phoenix condo. He used to travel a lot for work and went back to New York to visit family quite often. And I, for that matter, also traveled quite a bit for work, especially years ago when I did a lot of consulting and training work. So I can, for the most part, take care of myself. And if I have a problem, I know how to get help.

So the alone part isn’t bothering me.

What is bothering me, however, is the uncertainty of going home to a house where there’s someone who really doesn’t want me to be there waiting for me to get out of his life.

He’s already contacted me twice, asking if I’ve “given any thought to how we’ll move forward.” I have no idea what that’s supposed to mean. And when I attempted to reach him by phone, I got no answer. Instead, I got a text promising a call “tomorrow” and then another text the next day promising a call “later.” Like I was supposed to sit around and wait for him to call me. And not let my questions eat away at my brain while I waited.

It was around then that I began to refer to him as The Tormentor. (Kudos to my friend Jim, who came up with the right verb — torment — for what I was experiencing.)

I have obligations here that contractually bind me to Washington until August 20. I have numerous helicopter charters and other gigs scheduled right up through October 6. I can’t leave until after that. He knows this. How am I supposed to do anything in Arizona before then?

I emailed him and reminded him that I’d be home in October to clean up. I told him that thinking about our situation was making it difficult to get my work done. I told him that I’d already missed my book’s deadline by more than a month — more on that in a moment — because I simply couldn’t focus on the work. And asked him (again) not to contact me.

It took me a week to work that “communication” out of my system enough to get back to work.

Charlie the DogOf course, in the back of my mind, simmering like a pot of risotto, is knowledge that when I get back to Arizona in October, I’ll have to begin cleaning up the detritus of a 29-year relationship spread among three dwellings and a pair of hangars. I have to negotiate with The Tormentor on who’s keeping what. I know I’ve already lost custody of our dog, Charlie, despite the fact that I think I can give him a better home. Possession, after all, is 9/10ths of the law. But what else will I get — or be stuck with? And how much can I sell or throw away? And what will I do with my stuff until I land on my feet elsewhere?

Do you know how tough it is to keep these concerns on the back burner?

Anyway, it’s hard to blog when there’s crap like this stuck in your head.

The Book

Back in the late 1990s, I wrote a Visual QuickStart Guide for Peachpit Press about Mac OS 8. It was released at Macworld Expo in Boston and immediately sold out. It became my first bestseller.

I’ve revised the book for every significant revision of Mac OS since then. And, in most cases, my book has been in Apple stores the day Mac OS (now OS X) has been released.

I won’t lie: I work my ass off to get the book done on time. My editor, production guy, and indexer also work their asses off. We’re a great team and we get the job done, version after version, amazingly quick. It’s paid off, too. The book still sells remarkably well and, at 648 pages, is something I’m really proud of.

My RV OfficeThis time around, the book’s revision needed to be done in the summer. Not a big deal; the RV I live in during the summer, my “Mobile Mansion,” has an “office.” I have my 27-inch iMac, fully loaded with all the software I need to write and lay out my book based on the previous edition. Internet access is sketchy (and expensive) but workable.

Of course, I wasn’t expecting to be tormented by a soon-to-be ex-husband. My brain worked overtime on bullshit I had no control over, preventing me from thinking about what I needed to think about: my book revision. I missed one deadline after another, trickling in chapters that sometimes took days to finish. This from a person who could normally knock off two chapters for a revision every day.

It took a while to get back to work. And even then, I’m not up to speed. Yesterday I submitted two chapters totaling 28 pages; that’s the best I’ve done in a long time.

According to my progress report, I have 164 pages left. Some of those are index, table of contents, and intro pages, but I still have a solid 120 pages of real content to revise.

Many, many thanks to my editor and production guy. They’ve been extremely supportive of me in this difficult time. Yes, I missed the deadline. Yes, the book is very late. But they’re not nagging me. And I appreciate that.

I just hope I don’t ever have to drop the ball like this again.

As for blogging — well, when my head is clear enough to write, this book obviously has priority over my blog.

Flying

Of course, not everything is bad. My flying work this season has been amazingly good.

Drying Cherries with a HelicopterFor the first time ever, I had enough cherry drying standby contract work to bring on two more pilots. One worked with me for 25 days; the other worked with me for just 9 days, during “crunch time.”

You see, cherry season in any given area is remarkably short. My first contract started on June 6 and my last contract in that area ended on July 31. That’s less than 2 months. While it’s true that I’m still on contract until August 20, I had to relocate to a different area for that late season contract.

Rain on RadarThe busiest time for cherry drying pilots in the Quincy/Wenatchee area is from the beginning of the third week in June to the end of the third week in July. About five weeks.

It rained. We had rain one day that lasted all day long — from dawn until about 4 PM. It rained on everyone, everywhere. I flew a lot that day. A lot of growers without pilots lost their cherry crop.

There were a few other days of heavy rain. Every helicopter within 50 miles spent at least a few hours hovering over cherry trees on these days. I personally flew nearly 30 hours in June and July. The guys that work for me got a total of another 13 hours in the short time they were around.

A Helicopter on a BridgeAnd that’s not all. I also got a good charter client who has me fly him and others around to various locations around the state. He likes the helicopter’s off-airport landing capabilities because it saves him time over driving or using the company airplane. I did a bunch of flying for them, too.

And then there are the winery tours. And the helicopter rides. And the photo flights. For some reason, my phone is ringing off the hook this season. I am not complaining.

I flew so much, in fact, that I had to take the helicopter to Hillsboro, OR (near Portland) for a 100-hour maintenance while I was still under contract. I flew more than 100 hours since I left Arizona at the end of April — a period of less than three months! That’s never happened before. While it’s true that 12 of those hours was the time it took me to get from Arizona to Washington, it’s still a lot of local flying.

I’ve been earning more as a pilot than as a writer for the past three years. Now, when people ask me what I do for a living, I don’t feel weird telling them I’m a pilot. I am.

The Heights

My ViewOne of the very good things about my late season contract is where I get to live while I’m working: at the edge of a cliff near the top of a canyon with an amazing view. I never get tired of watching the rising sun creep down the opposite canyon wall every morning.

I’m living on a homesite with a house under construction right out my window. The owner of the home is building it himself. Because he’s not here very often, he likes having me here to keep an eye on things. He likes it so much that this year, he put in a gravel RV pad and 30 amp power — which was just connected today — so I’d be comfortable. I already have water and sewer hookups; until today I was on 110 v power.

My HelicopterThis year, my helicopter is parked on the property about 50 yards from the back of my RV. I can clearly see it out my back window.

The orchard I’m responsible for is right across the street. In the event that I have to dry, I can be on the premises within 5 minutes of a call. The orchard owners like that very much — especially since the orchard is 87 acres on hillsides and takes a good 2 to 2-1/2 hours to dry. The sooner I start, the sooner I’ll finish.

It’s very quiet here — unless they’re spraying the fruit or picking — and at night it’s so dark you can see every star in the sky.

Penny in the OrchardIn the evening, when it cools down, Penny the Dog and I go for a walk in the orchard. One of the owners told me I could pick their cherries and blueberries. Although fruit is not on my diet — more on that in a moment — I simply cannot resist fresh picked cherries or blueberries. So Penny and I go in with a plastic quart-sized container. We pick the small red cherries and yellow rainier cherries, which have very little market value but still taste great. And we finish up by walking down a row of blueberry bushes and picking the dark blue ones. The whole time, Penny is running around in the tall grass beneath the trees or avoiding the sprinklers or finding dead rodents to eat (don’t ask). And I’m getting a workout, climbing hills and sweating in the residual heat. Cherries and BlueberriesWe get back and I clean up the fruit and hit the shower. Then I spend the rest of the evening taking it easy — maybe sitting outside in the gathering dusk or watching something on one of the mobile mansion’s two TVs.

While it’s true that my early season campsite in Quincy is better equipped with 50 amp power, better water, and a more conveniently placed sewer hookup, I really like it here a lot better. I think I might stay until it’s time to go back to Arizona.

The Diet

I’d been wanting to shed some extra pounds for some time, but found myself eating my way through bouts of depression when I was in Arizona this past winter. As a result, I porked up to a number I’m too embarrassed to share here.

Captain MariaWhen I arrived in Washington I started exercising again and trying to watch what I ate. But when my pilot friend Mike came up with his helicopter for the 25 days he’d work with me, he told me about how he’d lost 80 pounds on Medifast. His wife had lost 70 pounds. I only needed to lose 35 pounds to get back to my goal weight — which is what I weighed in this photo from 2004. When my pilot friend Jim signed on, I did the same.

Medifast is not a diet for foodies. It’s extremely difficult for me to enjoy — no matter what anyone says about it. The food comes out of a box. You either add water and heat or you add water and shake. Or maybe you just unwrap it and eat it right out of the package.

It uses artificial sweeteners, which I hate. Fortunately, it doesn’t oversweeten. And there’s hardly any salt in any of the food — which is a great thing for hypertensive people like me.

Some of the food is actually quite good. I like the chicken soups (both kinds) and the chocolate pudding. The chocolate shake tastes amazing when made with leftover coffee instead of water. The crackers give you the ability to crunch something between meals. The chocolate chip pancakes are good any time of day that you don’t mind cooking up a pancake. And some of the snack bars aren’t bad at all. So there’s plenty I can eat. But there are more than a few meal choices I just can’t stomach.

To follow the plan, you eat five of these “meals” every day with one “lean and green” — basically a low carb green vegetable and plainly prepared lean meat. The meals have to be spread 2-3 hours apart. They aren’t large, but eating six times a day prevents you from getting hungry. My lean and green meal is usually some kind of grilled meat or fish with a salad. Easy enough. Fruit is not allowed. Actually, neither is the 1/2 teaspoon of sugar and 2 ounces of milk I put in my morning coffee. My big problem is drinking water — I can’t seem to drink as much as I’m supposed to.

The food costs about $300/month. That might seem like a lot, but when you consider that you’re buying hardly any other food and rarely eating out, it really isn’t bad at all. I’m saving money simply by staying out of the supermarket.

And it’s working. I’m down 20 pounds since I started 8 weeks ago. My clothes fit better — in fact, some of them are becoming loose. And my blood pressure is down so much I think I can drop one of my meds soon.

I might do better if I could just drink more water and stop eating cherries.

The Property

I’ve been looking for a new place to live for years. In 2005, I went on my “midlife crisis road trip” with the stated goal of looking for a new home. I got as far northwest as Mt. St. Helens. I should have gone a little farther, to the Wenatchee area.

This year, when it looked like business was really taking off for me, I started making some inquiries about properties for sale. I was shown a few inappropriate lots in the Quincy area before I started noticing some vacant land on a shelf beneath the cliffs in Malaga, right down the road from a winery I visit on my tours. I knew someone who owned a lot there and asked him who I could talk to about buying one. That’s when he told me that he and his wife had decided to sell theirs.

Ten acres of view property overlooking the Wenatchee/Malaga areas, including the Columbia River. Three minutes by air to Wenatchee Airport. More than 50% level enough to build on. Electric, water, and fiber optical cable on the property. And plenty of room to land the helicopter and build a hangar for it.

My Next Home?

The price was a little more than I was hoping to spend, but it really is perfect for me — especially with friends living just a half mile down the road.

When I first saw it, I still thought I had a future with my soon-to-be ex-husband. I told him about it. He said something vague, as he usually does. I later showed it to him. He liked it, but I could tell he had no interest in living there. It was all over by then.

But that was good for me. I could do what I wanted with it without having to tolerate his disapproving glares. You know — where he gives you a look that says he doesn’t like what you’re doing but never actually says anything about it? Those.

(Yeah, I’m still carrying a lot of baggage on this one. Sure hope I can shed it soon.)

The seller doesn’t want to sell until the first of the year — which is fine with me. I’m planning to put a storage building large enough to house the helicopter, mobile mansion, and my cars with some attached office space. I’ll probably live in the RV next year. Then, the following year, I’ll build a small house right at the edge of the shelf to take in the views. Lots of windows and shaded outside space.

Not sure if I’ll live here year-round yet. I’m thinking of traveling in the winter months, maybe with the mobile mansion. We’ll see.

Other Stuff

I have other ideas for my future here — other plans for personal growth and directions. I’m not the kind of person to settle down. The breakup of my marriage is probably the best thing to happen to me in a long time. It’ll force me to take on new challenges while giving me the freedom to tackle them without compromise or anyone holding me back.

I’m sad, though, that I can’t start this new chapter of my life with someone beside me, someone with similar goals and big dreams of adventure. It would be nice to have a teammate in the game of life.

More blog posts soon. Promise.

29 Years Ago Today

A day that changed my life — and what came afterward.

It was 29 years ago today, on July 10, 1983, that I met the man who would become my husband.

I was living in a studio apartment in Hempstead, NY, on Long Island at the time. I’d been out of college for just over a year and had been working since then as an Auditor at the New York City Comptroller’s Office. I hadn’t been dating; the one date I had after breaking up with my last college boyfriend had been a disaster caused by a complete mismatch between me and my date made worse by his inability to stop talking about his ex-wife. I had a male friend, but it was a completely platonic, if not boring, relationship. For a while, I thought he was gay, but I later learned that he eventually married.

On that afternoon, I’d decided that I wanted to go to Jones Beach with my camera to take pictures at sunset. I’d taken up photography in college — I’d even dated a photographer for a while — and I still tried my hand at it now and then. My friend, however, did not want to go. He wanted to hang around the house — his parents house, where he still lived. I didn’t. We had some minor words and I left on my own.

I wound up at West End 2, the beach closest to the city. I knew from experience that there were good views of the old Manhattan skyline back then — views that included the twin towers of the World Trade Center. Sometimes, when conditions were just right, the setting sun would form a big orange globe as it set behind that skyline. I guess that’s what I was hoping for that afternoon.

Mike was there, too, also with his camera. He’d been swimming and was wearing a bathing suit. His beach blanket was a ratty wool thing from a different time on the airlines. I don’t remember how we started talking, but I know that when he offered me space on his blanket, I said no.

There were some people out on the jetty that evening. They’d been sort of trapped out there as the tide came in. Minor drama — they eventually made it back, but not without some sort of rescue brouhaha. We watched the action. We took photos. We started to talk.

When the sun went down, he invited me out for a bite to eat. He was a stranger and I didn’t like the idea of a stranger buying me a meal. But I only had a few dollars on me — that was common for me back in those days. (I once took a train to Canada with only $20 on me and no credit cards.) We wound up going to the diner in Uniondale, near Nassau Coliseum, in two cars. He drove a white 1981 (I think) Volkswagen Rabbit. I drove my still fairly new light blue 1983 Nissan Pulsar NX.

At the diner, the only thing I could afford was a danish, so that’s all I ate.

I don’t remember what we talked about, but I do remember that we made a date.

Later that week, I told my mother that I thought I might have met “the one.”

We spent every other weekend in the Hamptons where he had a half share with a friend of his in a house for the season. His friend had met a woman there who also had a half share for the same weekends. We often went out together. They thought we’d known each other for years, mostly because we were constantly finishing each other’s sentences.

I was the down-to-earth 9-to-5 accountant type who wore business clothes and heels to work every day. The one putting her accounting degree to good use. The one satisfied with the same kind of lifestyle as any other white collar cube dweller. No, it wasn’t what I really wanted to do — what I really wanted was to be a writer. But my mother had talked me out of that path, telling me that it wasn’t a good career choice. I should have a more practical career and accounting fit the bill.

Mike, on the other hand, was the dreamer, the hobbyist inventor, the one with big ideas. I still remember him showing me his fiberoptic cable — back in 1983! — which he wanted to use to create lit-up signs. “If you want something, you have to make it happen,” he used to say to me.

In January, we got an apartment together in Bayside, Queens. It was a third floor walkup in a block of row houses. Three bedrooms and a view of the bay — and the Cross Island Parkway beneath our window.

I gave up my two cats because of his allergies and asthma.

He worked a manufacturer’s rep designing and selling custom HVAC equipment for a company in New Jersey. He liked his work and he did well at it. Best of all, he made his own hours and worked mostly from home, spending a lot of time visiting clients instead of sitting in a cube.

On weekends, we’d do things outdoors. Hiking, trips to the Planting Fields Arboretum, visits to museums in Manhattan. Or take spontaneous trips. I remember one Friday in particular when we both got home and one of us — I can’t remember which one — suggested going to Cape Cod for the weekend. Just like that, we packed our bags, got in the car, and left.

On September 10, 1984, he proposed to me and I said yes.

But we didn’t get married right away. We just kept putting it off.

In the meantime, we bought a house together in New Jersey. And we got a dog — a Dalmatian named Spot.

After five years with the City of New York, when it became obvious that I couldn’t get promoted beyond my current position unless someone above me died, I left my job. I got a job as an auditor for a small company based in Red Bank, NJ. I hated the job so much that four months later, I’d gotten a new job as an auditor for ADP in their Roseland, NJ corporate headquarters. I liked that job a lot better, mostly because it included a lot of travel. For the next two and a half years, I’d fly all over the country. On trips lasting longer than three weeks, ADP would either fly me home or fly Mike out to me. That’s how we were able to take driving vacations in California, Nevada, and Arizona without ponying up the airfare.

Mike’s job continued to do well. He was bringing in a lot of money. His bosses were talking partnership. Things were looking good.

I decided I wanted to learn how to ride a motorcycle. I bought one: a 1980 Honda 400cc Hawk that had only 941 miles on it. It had been owned by the motorcycle dealer’s wife and he put it in storage for 10 years after she died of cancer. It was a simple bike. At first, Mike thought we’d ride it together, but I set him straight. We took a Motorcycle Safety Foundation course (highly recommended) to learn how to ride. Then he bought a BMW Boxer. I don’t remember the details, but I remember it being gold colored and kind of ugly. We joined up with a group of other riders and made motorcycling a primary activity for weekends. We’d do trips all over the place — even up to Lake George for the annual Americade event. We both bought brand new bikes in 1991: him a BMW K65 and me a Yamaha Seca II. I still remember the looks on our friends’ faces when we joined them for a motorcycle camping trip, each rolling up on brand new bikes.

Meanwhile, I’d gotten myself into a position where I was asked to write a course for the Institute of Internal Auditors about using “microcomputers” for auditing. Personal computers were just taking off and laptops were a rarity. I had a Mac at home and used a PC laptop at work. I was entirely self-taught, but I knew what they needed to teach in their courses. Writing the course would earn me $10K — about 1/4 of a year’s pay back in 1990. I asked for a leave of absence to write it and was turned down. So I quit my job to start the writing career I always wanted.

My mother cried.

My freelance career got off to a rocky start, but soon picked up steam. Mike’s job, on the other hand, was not doing quite as well. His bosses had stopped paying his commissions. After a while, they owed him a lot of money. He kept working for them, earning even more money that they always seemed to have an excuse not to pay. He was unable to support himself on that job so he took on a second job as an energy auditor. Eventually, he parted ways with the company he’d worked for all those years. Two lawyers and a lot of legal expenses later, he had a judgement for a six-figure amount. He’s still waiting to collect.

He got a similar job with another company in New Jersey. He did well there. His boss was a great guy — even though he’s retired now, Mike still keeps in touch. Mike wound up getting a piece of the company but sold it when the primary owner decided to sell out. He stayed on with the new owner.

We still had great trips together — business trips to Cancun and on a cruise ship in the Caribbean. A motorcycle camping trip down Skyline Drive and the Blue Ridge Parkway and up the barrier islands of the Atlantic coast. Driving vacations from Seattle to San Francisco; through national parks in Colorado, the Dakotas, and Wyoming; and through some of the greatest scenery Arizona and Utah have to offer. The Florida Keys.

One cold winter after another and I decided I’d had enough of New Jersey. I spent one winter in Arizona and was hooked. Two years later, in 1997, we sold our home and moved to Arizona. Mike would continue working at his job from Arizona and make monthly one-week trips to New Jersey to meet with clients. He rented an apartment there to make his visits easier. And my work as a freelancer could be done from anywhere.

We wound up in Wickenburg, which, at the time, was a nice western town. Our house was on 2-1/2 acres of horse property, so it wasn’t long before we had two horses. And chickens. Although we still did some motorcycling, the straight long roads of Arizona’s desert can’t compare to the twisty roads we’d raced along in upstate New York and western New Jersey. We spent far more time sitting in horse saddles than motorcycle seats. We’d saddle up and ride into the desert right from our house. Our friends from New York and New Jersey told us we “lived on vacation.”

Around 1999, we bought a 40-acre parcel on Howard Mesa as an escape from Wickenburg’s oppressive summer heat. Over the next few years, we made various improvements to it — including a fence and septic system. We had two different sets of house plans drawn up, but Mike later admitted that it was too remote a place for him to live. But in 2005, we finally put a camping cabin on it. We spent many weekends and holidays there with the horses.

Spot died and we got a new dog, Jack, a Border Collie – Australian Shepherd mix.

My writing career took off. I invested in some rental property. And I started learning to fly helicopters. Like motorcycling, it was one of the things I’d always wanted to learn and do. I never expected to get hooked on it. By 2000, I owned a 2-place Robinson R22 Beta II helicopter and was working toward my commercial helicopter certificate. Mike learned to fly planes. He wound up going into a partnership with another pilot on an 1974 (I think) Grumman Tiger.

I got a contract to be the fuel manager at Wickenburg Airport. I fixed up the airport terminal, got new furniture, and had the landscaping redone. I expanded the hours of operation and added services for the charter and fractional jets that came in. I employed up to seven people at a time. We had monthly pancake breakfasts and occasional poker runs. The local pilots seemed to really like the change. The business netted about $45K per year. At first, Mike said he’d work at the airport for me while he did his other work. But that didn’t last very long.

Somewhere along the line, Mike’s monthly travel back to New Jersey started putting a strain on things. He backed off that. And that’s when his job troubles began. Although he wanted to do HVAC consulting work — which he was extremely qualified to do — he couldn’t seem to get started in Arizona. There’s a different work ethic there — a pretty crappy one if you’re accustomed to the fast pace and competitiveness of the New York market. Money became an issue and he wound up taking the first of several jobs that I really don’t think were a good match for him. He’d bounce from one job to the next after two or three years. He was unemployed for a while.

I worked as a commercial helicopter pilot at the Grand Canyon in 2004, at the height of my writing career. I was at work when I ordered the four-place Robinson R44 I own now. I took delivery in January 2005. By February, I had my Part 135 certificate in place so I could do air taxi work. I started building my business in my third career.

Sometime around then, he told me that when he turned 55, he’d retire and we’d work and travel around together. I felt that it was part of my job to set something up that we could both do. To prepare, he got his helicopter rating.

I sold my airport business due to problems with employees and the Town of Wickenburg’s failed attempts to censor my blog.

In 2006, we finally got married. I’ll admit it: I was concerned about health insurance coverage. After years of me having my own policy, I’d switched to his. We wanted to make sure I was covered. It was a civil ceremony held at the courtroom in Wickenburg. His partner on the airplane and his wife were our witnesses — mostly because all of our close friends had already moved out of town. Afterwards, we went out for dinner.

Golden Gate Bridge
Two kids having fun in June 2006.

Mike and I still went on trips together, but they were notably shorter and far more planned. A two-night mule trip into the Grand Canyon with friends in 2005 was a lot of fun. A business trip to Napa Valley in 2006, which we elected to do by car in my Honda S2000, stands out in my mind because it was so much like the old days, when money didn’t matter (much) and having fun was the priority. A cruise to Alaska in 2007 was marred by bad service, lost luggage, and a complete lack of individual treatment that we’d come to expect. With Mike working a regular 9-to-5 schedule and having limited vacation time, we didn’t seem able to get out as much as we used to.

I started traveling on my own. I took the helicopter on long, cross-country flights to Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and California. In 2005 I took what I still refer to as my “midlife crisis road trip,” — 20 days in my Honda, wandering around the northwestern United States, making up every day as I went along. I didn’t mind traveling alone — as long as I traveled. I needed to get out and see something.

Compounding matters was the incredible change in Wickenburg, where we lived. What had once been a “horsey” town with guest ranches and a lot of people to go riding with turned into a retirement community. The mayor and council decided to grow the town by approving ever larger subdivisions with ever smaller lot sizes. They concentrated on expanding housing in town and annexing whatever surrounding areas they could. They did nothing to stimulate business growth. And the new seasonal residents, who were mostly retired, didn’t support local businesses, preferring instead to make the drive down to the Walmart and other stores in Surprise and Peoria 30 miles away. Our friends started moving away. Politics got nasty, with personal attacks and threats against residents who didn’t toe the line. I began to really dislike the town and think about moving.

In 2008, I came to Washington State for my first season of cherry drying work. I was gone for eight weeks. I returned year after year, for slightly more time each season. I started to really like it in Washington — far more than I liked it at home. Each year, when I was away, Mike would come up for one or two visits on his vacation time. But this often turned into a serious inconvenience for me when I had other responsibilities to attend to. There were bitter feelings on both sides.

Mike’s horse died. Faced with the decision of having to get another horse or find a home for mine, we decided to find a home for mine. The chickens went, too. Having these kinds of animals didn’t fit into our lifestyle, with Mike working long hours in Phoenix and me traveling to Washington every summer.

By 2010, Mike was working for a Phoenix company that sold Astroturf. He was living during the week in a condo he’d bought in Phoenix. A friend of ours, who lives in the Williams, AZ area and works for the same company, was his roommate. When I went there, I felt like a visitor in someone else’s home.

I went to see Mike in his job one day and was appalled by his working conditions. He was in a tiny office crammed with two cubicles, one of which was his. His office mate was loud and seemed to spend more time watching YouTube than doing work. He worked at this job from 7 AM to 4 or 5 PM daily. I’d see him on weekends.

Jack died while Mike was in New Jersey on business. He got sick suddenly; within three days he could barely breathe and couldn’t walk. It was a tumor on his heart. I held him when the doctor put him down, then got every trace of him out of the house to ease Mike’s pain when he got home.

Mike turned 55 in May 2011. He showed no signs of giving up his job or working with me.

When I came back from Washington in October 2011, I moved my office down to the condo. His roommate had moved into his own place nearby. Mike and I could live in Phoenix with some level of privacy. But there was an underlying strain from trying to live in two homes and me trying to reconfigure my writing schedule to a Monday to Friday workweek. You see, when I have a project I work almost every day until it’s done. Then, between projects, I goof off. It was difficult for me to keep “office hours.” I couldn’t work efficiently in both places.

We got a new dog, a Border Collie named Charlie.

As the economy began to slump, profits at Mike’s company suffered. His boss started putting the squeeze on everyone at the company, making unreasonable demands. Mike would come home from work miserable. During the week, after work, he was tired and mostly just wanted to unwind in front of the TV. When we were together in Wickenburg on weekends, he was more interested in doing things around the house than spending quality time together. And did I mention that he was still doing work for that company in New Jersey? Making calls and writing bids in his “spare” time?

We fought about the usual things. All couples fight. But as time went on, we fought more and more. I couldn’t understand why he stuck with a job he so obviously hated. I was bitter because he’d broke his age 55 promise to me. He seemed satisfied to struggle with his job in Phoenix, coming to Wickenburg on weekends. I wanted a better life for both of us. One without the kinds of stress he was clearly putting up with. One where we could both relax and enjoy life a little more. I couldn’t understand why he wasn’t aching for the kind of change I was and it frustrated me to no end.

Something else came up around then. I realized that when I made a decision or did something that he didn’t like, he’d give me a sour face but never actually say what was on his mind. No matter what I did or said he didn’t seem happy about it.

It all came to a head in February. His mom had come for a visit. She was supposed to stay in an assisted living place in Wickenburg — a very nice place, I might add. She had her own private apartment. She was supposed to be on her own. But instead, Mike squeezed her into his schedule with me and his other two jobs. And another job he was trying to get started up. I stayed in Phoenix; he brought her by the house in Wickenburg nearly every day. We never had any time alone. This would go on for two months.

And then, when he was on the verge of getting a new job, his boss laid him off.

To me, this was like winning the lottery. He’d finally get some time off — with unemployment pay. I had five days coming up between flying jobs. We had the RV waiting for us in the hangar. Flowers were blooming in Death Valley. We both had new cameras to play with. We’d spend five days in Death Valley with our dog in the RV.

It took him 3 days to agree. Then it took him another 2 days to make reservations at a campground in the park. By that time, they didn’t have five consecutive days for us. We’d have to wing it for 2 days. The countdown to departure day continued. I finished a flying job and came home with two days left. Of course, his mom was at the house. And he hadn’t told her we were going away. One day left — we really needed to pack the RV and prep for the trip. But he let our dog out with the pug belonging to a friend that was spending a few days with us. Our dog came home but the pug didn’t. We spent all day looking for it.

I snapped.

I was just tired of things not working out. Of there always being an excuse for something not happening the way it could or should.

We didn’t go on the trip. I moved into the condo full time. I buried myself in writing work. I began making plans to come to Washington early.

He took his mom home and spent two weeks there doing his other jobs. I was due to leave less than two weeks after he got back.

He asked me if I’d see a marriage counsellor. I agreed. I went once alone, he went once alone, and we went together. It might be my imagination, but I think that my main complaint was communication — I needed him to tell me what was going on in his head. I may also have imagined that we agreed to have THE conversation.

But that never happened. I tried several times and he kept saying he didn’t want to talk about it.

And then I left for my summer in Washington.

In May, he finally got the job he’d been chasing for five years: a regional manager job with an HVAC equipment manufacturer. The job would let him work from home and make his own hours, but he’d be doing a lot of travel. He said I could come with him. And he told me over the phone that he was willing to drive up to Washington with the dog to spend the summer with me.

But first he had to go to Ohio and Florida to get some training. That would be in early June.

He went. We spoke on the phone a few days a week. He came home. He never said another word about coming to Washington.

In late-June, I found two greeting cards he’d sent me years ago. I have no idea why they were in the RV. They made me sad. I sent them to him with a note explaining how they made me feel and how much I missed the dreamer, the inventor, the “make it happen” guy.

I didn’t hear anything from him. Silly me — I began to suspect that maybe he was on his way to Washington. Maybe he’d surprise me for my birthday. Wouldn’t that be great? Something spontaneous and unpredictable? Something like in the old days?

Then, on my birthday, he sent me a text message with a photo of the garden he was growing at our Wickenburg house. (I’d given up on gardening there years ago when he showed no interest in it; funny how things change.) I realized then that he wasn’t coming. Moments later, he called to wish me a happy birthday. It was a normal conversation. Until the end, when he started talking about dividing assets.

He was ending our marriage on my birthday on the phone.

I can’t begin to explain the parade of emotions that swept through me. Anger was certainly one of them. I told him I didn’t want to talk about it on my birthday and hung up. It wasn’t until the next day that I got the letter — a letter! — he’d sent, saying that he believed it was over.

That was ten days ago. Ten days before this 29th anniversary of the day we met. The only anniversary we ever celebrated.

I’m numb. Although I’ve known deep down for at least six months that our relationship wasn’t working out and I was ready to walk out permanently in February, more recent conversations — coupled with him finally getting a job where he might be able to relax and enjoy life a little — gave me the impression that there was still some hope. Wrong again, I guess.

But I’ll deal with it. It’s what I have to do.

Time to pick up the pieces and start fresh.

August 27, 2012 Note: I wrote this blog entry as a tribute to a relationship I was in for more than half of my life. The information here is factual and not intended to disparage anyone. I loved my husband very much — and probably still do, despite what’s been happening since this was written. The pain I’m suffering now is so fierce it cannot be described — his apparent lack of understanding or caring after a 29 year relationship is completely inexplicable to me. While I suspect that my words here will somehow be used against me by his lawyers, I refuse to let my side of the story go untold. The rest of the story will come when the dust has settled. I only hope he treats me as fairly as the man I married would have as I struggle to retain everything I’ve worked hard for all of my life.

Yes, I’m Still Around

But busy having a life and dealing with it.

I know I’ve been neglecting this blog when my sister mentions that I haven’t posted anything new in a while. Oops.

Truth is, I’ve been busy. House guest, cell phone lost on mountain top, two days of aerial survey work, rush to finish a writing job, plan a last minute vacation, search for a lost dog, cancel last-minute vacation, find lost dog, etc.

Life. Sometimes it interrupts blogging.

But wouldn’t you want it that way? I’m not complaining.

(Although I could have done without that lost dog episode.)