That’s always something I struggle with. OK here goes: Hi, I’m Tam!
The best thing in my life is my wonderful wife Karen. Marriage for us, something we never thought would happen in our lifetime; and we found each other later in life. I cherish our relationship every day. I am grateful to work as a Software Cloud/Technology Consultant, which has turned out to be a job I really enjoy. I love to play with my pets, my yarn and fiber stash. And yes, I have fibromyalgia and advanced osteoarthritis in lots of joints, lymphocytic colitis, a sun allergy – a rather well-rounded collection of auto-immune stuff I suppose.
We started this blog to talk about life at 55 with fibro, more or less, so I thought I should get that bit of that medical stuff out of the way. There’s more to my daily struggles, of course – the depression that goes along with the pain, the anxiety that goes along with the depression and trying to maintain a career (not just a job) with fibro. The despair of letting go of one dream after another, the confusion of not knowing which dreams to let go and which to try to nurture through the days of pain when I think I’ll never do much of anything fun again.
But I still dream! A lot. I am a bit ADHD (got it from my 2 kids) and I think this is a trait: I see myself doing all sorts of things in unrealistically short amounts of time, such as turning half the backyard into a garden of raised beds with gravel paths between them. In one Saturday morning. Seriously – I can see it! Beautiful raised beds full of herbs, tomatoes and peppers, lots of green stuff, and plump orange pumpkins!
In reality, I’m doing good if I can get a couple 6-packs of annuals planted on time.
In my dreams, we live on a big wooded acreage, with lake access, in northern Minnesota, or maybe in the Pacific Northwest. We have fantastic internet access which I can take a tax deduction for, because I work long-distance writing code and provisioning software. We live in a small, one-story house – not tiny, because we still have a couple good-sized dogs, and a cat or two. Small enough to clean though. We have a small barn for our goats and a gorgeous chicken coop that makes the cost of our eggs exorbitant but so much fun! And of course, Karen has a writing studio, I have a small (but adorable) woman-cave/shed for my fiber cleaning and dyeing and drying and my larger spinning and weaving equipment.
In reality we live in an adorable small house in East Saint Paul, an inner ring suburb. We have a double lot, which we fenced in so we could have big dogs. Three of ’em. Every day I throw frisbees or balls for them, so the back is half sandlot, half scrubby insufficient grass and weeds. We have really large shade-providing maple trees, complete with squirrels, woodpeckers, finches, hawks, crows, and sparrows. At certain times of the year we get warblers, nuthatches and juncos coming through. I used to feed the birds, until I acquired this rescue cat who loves to sneak out the door and just chill in the backyard. Alas – no garden, no chickens, and no goats.
Still my reality isn’t so bad. Sure the house is a bit dirty. It’s still the most adorable house ever! It’s small, but still twice what we can honestly handle. We keep building ways to cope into our lives. Having a couple wonderful services for cleaning up and mowing the yard has been a huge boon – helps me find the energy to get those annuals in the ground. We might border on hoarding, but are working on swapping our financial and clutter habits – keep more money hanging around, get rid of a lot of the stuff that really just gets in the way!
Keeping things manageable is a challenge. I’ve made it a challenge to find “tiny” approaches to fiber work – drop spindles, knitting socks on double-points, lap loom weaving. I manage to nurture my funny little obsessions with hobbies and pets and wild birds, and the gardening I dream about every year. We have a couple close friends – which is really all we have energy for. And like many with chronic illness, we enjoy time on the computer or binge-watching a series.
I have a lot that I love in my life. The pain doesn’t define me. So how’s that for an introduction?