The end

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Six months, four days.

It felt never-ending at times. Like an entire lifetime was passing by. Hamsters running, running, running yet going nowhere on a wheel that spins in place.

But it only took six months, four days to end fifteen years.

I could feel his head turn, his eyes – heavy with sadness – set on me, waiting to hear my answer as the judge asked me one last time:

"Do you see anyway that the two of you can resolve your issues?"

I felt weighted with guilt as though both our futures rested on my answer alone; as though everything that had led up to this point had been up to me and me only, when really, if I could have fixed this I would have. I couldn't. We didn't.

There were a lot of things I wanted to say to him. Things I wanted to tell him. To let him know that I was sad too. But anything I could possibly say or try to explain, well, it just wouldn't count anymore.

It wasn't what I expected – to be willing away tears and choking back emotion – when hearing the judge dissolve what took us fifteen years to create. Despite the moments of lashing out and anger, tense arguments and disgreements, the finality of it all felt heavy and sad. While at times throughout the emotionally-wearing process I yearned to hear those words – The End – the truth is, I never imagined having to hear them at all. I didn't get married to get divorced; I never expected to go from Man and Wife to Petitioner and Respondent and what went from intimate and ours instantly went to separate and strangely cold with the stamp of a judge's seal.

It isn't about regret or remorse over ending what couldn't continue; it is grieving over the fact that it had to end at all; that those whimsical – perhaps naive – ideals that we started out with turned out to be impractical and unattainable for us.

The judge was waiting for my answer.

I stared at the microphone, my vision blurring and making it two and I felt claustrophobic in my own skin.

"No, Your Honor."

His head turned away from me. He never looked at me again. Not as we left the court room or awkwardly shared an elevator with our attorneys down to the lobby or as we exited the courthouse. And for the first time, it truly felt like the end.

Liking and loathing

What I'm currently liking and loathing… It's like Oprah's Favorite Things except no one gets a car and she's actually on my loathing list. But otherwise, very similar.

I am so loathing…

This whole 'rapture' thing. I don't get it. Wasn't the world supposed to end in 2012? Is that different? Oh wait. Before you explain it to me, let me explain something to you: I don't care. SNORE.

Oprah. Blah, blah, blah. Her show is ending? FINALLY. Oh wait. Now she has an entire CHANNEL? Of just Oprah-ish things? OH GOODIE! So really, all this hype about The End of Oprah is just bullshit because really, it's just The Beginning of All Things Oprah? Shoot me.

Rain in May. Okay, okay. So where you live you get snow 10 months out of the year and have to wear shoes that cover your toes sometimes. APPLES AND FROST COVERED ORANGES. People, this is my first time having a place with actual air conditioning. Dear Mother Nature, please let me have a use for it!

All the media coverage on Arnold Schwartzdouchenneggar. What an asshole. I don't want to hear the gross oily overly bronzed muscular details and I'm sure his kids don't want to read them either. The end. Please?

But! I am totally liking…

The White Buffalo. I've seen him (solo) live once and with the band once and, well, I'm smitten. Fantastic song writing and his delivery and stage presence is riveting. A new album is on its way, but in the meantime you can find his music on iTunes… Some of my favorites: The Moon, Today's Tomorrow, Story and Bar and the Beer.

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Sanuks! Saw these back when I was in Maui a couple of years ago and now I'm seeing them here on the 'mainland' everywhere. Super comfortable, the must have Summer sandal and Zappos has an awesome selection of styles and colors.

Speaking of which, I love me some Zappos. I straight up earned my VIP status with them. My #1 pet peeve with online shopping is how long is takes some of the retailers to get your items to you. Not just shipping time but this so-called 'processing time' that adds a week on to your delivery. In the words of Veruca Salt, "I want it noooooow" and Zappos is as close to 'right now' as you get. Overnight shipping that means overnight shipping? YES PLEASE.

I'll be surprised if I don't hear this song quite a few times at the weddings I photograph this summer…

Yoga. I'm back in the… bend of things and I realize how much I've missed it. Besides, how great is an exercise where just breathing correctly forces you to kegel, right?

This video is a bit long but so worth it. Sobering. Amazing. Inspiring. 50 people. One city. One question.

How would you answer it?

***

What are you liking? Loathing?

Pass the bronzer, bitches.

Just shimmying into my new workout pants and taking my two boobs and wiggling them unnaturally to form one *powerful* uniboob via a sports bra made me feel stronger and more confident and as though I COULD DESTROY THE WORLD! Which is ironic since I then immediately turned from my Hulk Hogan HULKAMANIA! pose in the mirror only to walk into a partially open door.

Baby steps.

I've threatened to start an exercise regime many-a-times before – and even made a pitiful attempt or two in the past – but this time, it's so on. You see, I've got mad competition. And I like a good challenge. The back story behind it all is what one might call that of the Batshit Crazy variety, but in short, my friend Tamara in TX got herself hooked on this TV show "Steel Divas" about female bodybuilders (normal) and bam! next thing you know, she's down like 15 pounds, boasting over the phone about lost inches while I'm eating straight out of the Baskin Robbins Rocky Road pint container with a plastic spoon, staring at the sagging skin of my inner thigh (where I dropped a marshmallow) thinking OH HAIL NO BITCH, I CAN BE FREAKISHLY MUSCULAR TOO.

Pass the bronzer, bitches.

Actually, I don't care to throw on a teeny-tiny neon bikini, bleach my hair a pretty shade of gold and charbroil myself in a tanning salon after spending every day benchpressing a small continent a la my good friend Tamara. (You should see her flex.) I just want to tone up and maybe even try some of that 'cardio' everyone thinks is so great for you.

Of course, starting an exercise routine for me isn't about looking up exercises or diets or BMI. Nah. It's about finding the perfect music playlist, discovering you can't find your iPod since you moved, buying a new one, finding the RADDEST slap-bracelet for it, buying new workout clothes (because the ones you bought for your last Get Fit! attempt are used. Once.) and then spending a couple days at the pool tanning your legs so you look good in those workout pants which ended up being capris.

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Slap bracelet for iPod Nano bitches!

You know, because everyone in the gym gives a shit what your shins look like when mascara is running down your cheeks and your hair is matted to your forehead. DON'T LOOK AT MY FACE ASSHOLE — CHECK OUT MY SHINS! TAN MOTHERFUCKERS, AREN'T THEY? YEP. YEP.

SIDE NOTE: What underwear, exacly, are you supposed to wear with workout pants/capris? 'Cause the ones I wore today ain't it.

Now before you get all "You're so vain, you probably think this eyeroll's about you – don't you? Don't you?" on me because I'm all tunnel-vision on what I look like when I workout, give me a little credit. I'm the not the most confident worker-outter. I practically got kicked out of Kamikazee Kickboxing at MMA because I nervous-talked my whole way through it. Well that and I kept trying to get everyone to ditch with me. "But I'll buy the first round of shots!" So venturing down to the Sweat Box where no one gives a shit but I think they do is nerve-racking.

As it turns out, my anxiety was somewhat legit. Of course, no one cared about me or what I looked like. But I did make a total ass of myself. Business as usual, I know. But apparently, there is some gym etiquette I need to learn if I'm going to get into shape. 

1. It is apparently not a treadmill competition. So, you, the new girl in the gym, probably shouldn't feel the need to out-run (especially when you don't run. ever.) the woman next to you. You also shouldn't feel the need to out-incline her or outlast her. Because you can't. And you won't.

2. Don't stare at your feet while running walking fast on the treadmill. You will lose your balance. 

3. Don't try to look in the mirror across the room at yourself while on the treadmill. You will lose your balance.

4. Even if your attention span is this big, resist the urge to dance on the treadmill to mix things up a bit. You will lose your balance.

5. If you're in your non-race with the woman next to you who is not even aware you're competing to win at nothing and therefore going faster than you really feel comfortable going, don't try to redo your ponytail. You will lose your balance.

6. Don't stop the treadmill abruptly. You will face-plant the control panel.

7. Elliptical machines hate short people.

8. Apparently, it's quite easy to pull the handle off the elliptical machine. Also? You will lose your balance when you do this. Every time.

9. Just when you get the hang of the motion of the elliptical ocean, the stupid thing will tell you to switch directions. What an asshole.

10. 30 minutes to an exercise machine is 90 minutes in the real world.

11. Don't touch the machines that look like modern torture devices. If you don't know what they do or what they're called or even which direction you stand? lie? sit? on them, you probably have no business attempting to use them.

12. No matter how many times you look, your ass will not have become noticeably more fit during your oh-mi-gawd-that-was-a-lot-of-sweating workout. Even if it was a whole hour long.

And that was day one.

For day two, I'm going to venture back into the world of yoga. You know, where NO talking is allowed. Like, at all. Good luck to me, right?

Fifty percent mom

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"T, you can go sit with your mom," the teacher whispers to my four year old as I walk in the door, five minutes late to Mother's Day tea at Holy Rollin', having had to hurry back from dropping off my middle guy at his school.

"No. I don't want to sit with her."

There is a collective chuckle in the room. A crooked smile crosses my face as I internally process why he would rather sit alone on the busy blue carpet than sit with me like all the other kids have done with their mothers. I let it go. That's Big T. Always with a mind of his own, always doing what he wants, and besides, how uncool for a big boy to sit with his mom anyway?

It's craft time. T doesn't want to do the crafts with me. Ok, cranky. This is not my normally hyper, creative, clingy dude. He's supposed to make a bracelet for me. He rushes to complete the task dutifully and then doesn't want to let me wear it. "Please? I thought you made it for me?" He crosses his arms and shakes his head no, then starts to cry. Um… did he not get enough sleep last night?

The rest of the morning continues like this. Tears. Begging to go home before the brownies and strawberries and whipped cream and tea. He LOVES brownies and strawberries and whipped cream. When he's not crying he's working hard to keep from doing so and I'm counting the minutes until we're done with what was supposed to be a sweet little celebration for Mother's Day and I can finally take him home.

Not one single mother – of the twenty that are there – speak to me. I do not belong amonst them and on top of that my son is curled in my lap on cheap preschool carpet begging to get out of there. I sympathize. We limp through tea time. He eats two strawberries with tear-streaked cheeks and asks if we can go. Yes. YES. But not without his teacher taking a photo to capture this uncomfortable moment for my Mother's Day frame. Yes, please, let me remember this moment forever. In the frame he didn't want to make me.

T requests a salad for lunch and we drive to the restaurant quietly. He must be tired. He probably needs a nap. As I pull into a parking spot he finally speaks.

"You know why I'm so mad at you?"

Stunned silence. Wait. What? All that crying and begging to go home and crankiness is because my 4 year old is mad at me?

I turn back to look at him in his car seat, still buckled, car still running. "You're mad at me?" I ask incredulously.

"I'm so mad at you, mommy. You were late for Mother's Day tea." And he starts to cry all over again.

And I start to cry. I can't believe how bummed he is. How disappointed he is. How hurt he is.

I was five minutes late. I'm never late. I'm always ridiculously early and I'm certain my not being there right away left him feeling like I might not show. And I can't imagine how he must have felt thinking I wasn't coming back when I promised I would. I missed one of the three songs they sang and only because I was dropping off his brother at another school.

But it's not about missing the song or being late and while I am shaken and hurt to hear how upset he is by my tardy arrival, that this is what the whole morning had been about, I'm more frustrated that this is the mother I now am: The fifty percent mom.

I've never been 50 percent of anything. I don't do 50 percent. For better or worse, I give everything my all. And here I am, held prisoner by the court system to be no more than a 50 percent mom to my own children.

Going from being 100 percent mom – stay-at-home mom even – 100 percent of the time because that's all I've ever been and all I've ever been allowed to be, to having the family law court system tell me that I can only see my own kids 50 percent of the time on a schedule a judge declared 'fair' – complete with written scheduled phone calls on my non-custodial days between certain time frames – is devastating. Going from room parent and school volunteer to not being allowed on field trips because it isn't 'my day' with my kids is unjust. Having the kids on a day that is not, by court order, 'mine' being coined "babysitting" when I'm their mother, only getting them on every other holiday and their birthdays if, by chance, they fall on 'my day' and not 'his day' is just… wrong. 

And on the days I'm lucky enough to be allowed to be their mom – those kids I gave birth to – because, you know, the court let's me be, I'm spread so thin that I'm not always able to be 100 percent of a parent to all of them. I find myself five minutes late to Mother's Day tea, being laughed at by a classroom full of mothers who are clearly better than me, and worst, left feeling like I've failed one of the three people who depend on me the most.

Well, fifty percent of the time.

I feel like I'm being robbed of my motherhood.

Trying to stop the tears streaming down my own cheeks, I picked up T out of his car seat, almost too big to carry, and reminded him, "Listen buddy. I'm sorry I was late. I promised I would be there and I was — it just took me a little longer than I expected. But I will always do my best to keep my promises to you. You know why? Because I love you. To the moon and back."

I can't have my boys 100 percent of the time but I love them all of the time and no one can take that from me so I remind them every chance I get and hope that it's enough.

Marching for Maddie – Photos

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Couldn't be prouder to be a part of this amazing group of people who showed up early on a Saturday morning to march for Maddie and for babies like her in the Los Angeles March of Dimes Walk.

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No one complained about what time it was. Or about how warm it was. Or how far it was. Everyone was spirited and grateful and humble.

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Even Annie was in the marching mood, ready to take on the pavement.

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And I'm super proud of this dude – my oldest – who is a March of Dimes baby himself; who asked me if he could come along and walk the three miles with me.

You can see all the March for Maddie photos here.