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Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

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Ten Years

February 4, 2018 is the tenth anniversary of when my mom passed away. A whole decade. It's hard to believe. 

I didn't originally intend on holding on to it for ten years, but I kept a bottle of my mom's favorite perfume, Chanel #5. She wore it pretty much every day and it's the fragrance that I most associate with my mom. Honestly, it's not my favorite perfume. It's not something that I would wear. When mom died, my aunt actually took the bottle home, but she never opened it and when she died, I kept it,  the box sealed, until this morning.

I unwrapped it and hesitated before smelling. Perfume goes off and this had been a decade. What if it soured? Or what if it simply didn't smell the way I remembered? 

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I sprinkled a few drops on my wrist and it smelled exactly how I remembered, rich and syrupy, with notes of flowers that I can't place. It smells like mom. I used to give her a bottle every year for her birthday and this one I gave to her just a few weeks before the cancer diagnoses, less than four months before she died.

When I was nineteen and at Mills College in Oakland, I drove to San Francisco and bought her birthday bottle at the Chanel boutique. It was wrapped in beautiful, Chanel paper and just felt extra special. Of course, this was the only time that I have been selected for a random screening at the airport and security had to unwrap the present to check it. Luckily, a kind security officer found scotch tape and rewrapped it for me. I should note that this was before 9/11, when security was less intense. 

The months between the diagnoses and when she passed were, by far, the worst of my life. I could barely keep it together, but now when I think back on that time, my bad memories are mostly eclipsed by remembering the kindness people showed me. I was so lucky to be working for great managers at Universal, who were flexible with my need for time off to take care of my mom. I never felt stressed about having to miss work. I had friends checking on me every day, calling, sending notes and visiting. None of it went unnoticed or has been forgotten.

One really special package came from my friend Amy, whom I've never met in person, but befriend through our mutual love of books via Bookcrossing. Amy heard that we had to cancel a pedicure appointment because my mom was too sick. and she sent us a home pedicure kit. I was blown away. It was one of the most thoughtful things anyone has ever done for me.

I remember specific details about those months. I remember the last meal I had with my mom before we got her diagnosis; she met me at Universal City Walk for lunch at Tony Romas. The main reason was to give me some hand warmers that she had bought for me to take on my fall trip to Connecticut. I remember going to Starbucks after leaving the doctor's office, when we knew, but she didn't want to talk about it. We drank iced lattes and tried to pretend that everything was normal, but it wasn't.

A few weeks before she died, when she was in the hospital, I made an unfortunate outfit choice and she picked on me. She made me laugh. I had purchased these rain boots with multi-colored hearts all over them and decided to wear a denim mini-skirt, pink sweater, pink tights, and these boots. I thought it was cheerful and I needed cheerful. She thought it was garish and horrible. She was right. She was too tired, too weak to read in the hospital, so I read aloud non-fiction humor books by David Sedaris and Laurie Notaro. Which also made us laugh.

I had a reunion with my childhood friend, Karin, who worked as a breathing specialist and stopped by to give mom treatments. My mom knew her too, so this seemed like an extra blessing. 

I don't remember the last conversation that I had with her. I've tried so hard to recall it, but it's just not there. She was awake when I went to dinner with her best friend, Nancy, on the evening of Friday, February 1st. We left the hospital not realizing that it was the last time we would talk with her. We had dinner at Dinah's Chicken and went back to the hospital.

I slept three nights in the hospital, only leaving that weekend to go home and take a quick shower, grab supplies. There was a couch that made into a bed in her room and the nurses were wonderful, checking to make sure that I was doing okay too. Nancy stayed with me and my aunt came down from Tustin. I didn't sleep much and I was too tired to read. I remember spending a majority of the time planning Julie's baby shower, that I was co-throwing with Fanny. I was looking up Martha Stewart-esque party ideas, as my mom's breathing became increasingly shallow and the "death rattle" came.

She passed away on Monday morning. I'm not sure when she actually died, there wasn't anything monitoring her. No flat-line. I remember looking at Nancy and saying that something felt different. I went over to mom and she was absolutely still. I used the intercom to call the nurse and as we waited for the nurse to come, I told my mom that I loved her.

My aunt, who had been sleeping at my mom's house ( ten min away) showed up before the doctor had finished. She felt terrible for not having spent the night with us and it hurts me to think that she carried that burden with her. I know she did. 

I remember funny things about that morning. We waited in the hallway, while the nurses dealt with mom's body. When I went back in the room to get my stuff, I couldn't look at her body. I felt repulsed. It was no longer her.  I didn't want to be with my aunt or Nancy. I should have stayed with them, they were hurting too, but I just wanted to go back to my apartment in Pasadena. It was a sunny morning and my eyes hurt when I drove home. I didn't have sunglasses. Divorce was inevitable and I pushed my husband away when he tried to console me. I didn't want him at the hospital and I told him to stay at work that morning. To be fair, he tried. I know he cared for my mom and felt hurt too, but I didn't want him as part of my hurt. 

I got home and cuddled with my cat, Nicolette, on my bed. I was so tired. Too tired to sleep. Whole body tired. I also felt overwhelming relieved that it was over. Mom had suffered so much in just a few months and the not knowing how much worse it might get, made me suffer too. I felt relieved. Julie called me. She had found out through her parents, who found out through my aunt. She wanted to leave work to come be with me, but I said it was okay. The following weekend she treated me to a day at Burke Williams, where we got massages and took fancy baths in tubs that were side-by-side. They put cucumbers on our eyelids and then gave us a bowl of fruit to eat while in the tub. We started cracking up, because it wasn't so easy to eat fruit with vegetables on our eyelids!

Less than an hour after going home, I got a call regarding organ donation. Mom was an organ donor, but I was shocked with her emaciated, cancer-ridden body, that anything could be of use. It turns out they could use her corneas and I spent an hour on the phone answering medical questions. Mom was organized and she had created a medical folder with her complete medical history, including everything regarding her cancer. I started laughing on the phone, which surprised the medical guy, but I told him that my mom would have been so happy to know that her organization skills were paying off! I could easily answer all of his questions by using the binder. I know she would have been happy.

Fanny came over to be with me. We made yogurt parfaits and sat chatting in my living room. She shared news with me, some of the happiest, most important news that anyone has ever shared with me- she was pregnant! The baby, Rachel, came the following September and she is  very special to me. I love being a step-mom to Zoe and Felix, and "Auntie Karen" to all of my friend's kids. I have a lot of kids to love in my life. But I have to say, that Rachel is extra special in my heart and part of that is because I learned about her on that morning. It was the happy news that I needed to hear. Mom would have loved her too. 

Mom was a volunteer with the Glendale Police Department and they wanted to help with her Celebration of Life. It ended up being a bit of a big deal. We rented the banquet room at the Elks Lodge and hundreds of people showed up. The chief of police came and so did the police dogs. My mom helped raise money for the police dog program and became close to those officers, K-9 and human. They even got special permission to bring a dog into the hospital the week before she died. This is the last picture I have of my mom. I don't like thinking of her this way, so sick, but I know that she was happy that they bought one of the dogs to visit. It was a really special moment. 

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We didn't have an actual funeral. Mom had made arrangements for a cremation and burial plot for herself, back when my dad died in the early 80's. Forest Lawn was actually rather shitty to deal with and it just seemed ridiculous to pay thousands of dollars extra to schedule a time to watch her urn be placed in her slot. I declined. I actually went back to work on the day she was supposed to be interred. It was Valentine's Day.

Valentine's Day is my favorite holiday. Even with mom having just died and my marriage falling apart, I was still happy for Valentine's Day. I received multiple flowers from colleagues ( for my mom, not Valentine's Day- That would have been weird) and I had a really great first day back at work. Life was moving on. 

I was worried that this tenth anniversary would be horrible, but then I realized something about the date that shifted my thinking. The tenth anniversary of my mom's death, falls on Super Bowl Sunday! Super Bowl Sunday is a magical day of the year. I don't care about football, although my mom did. Super Bowl Sunday is magical, because everything else is empty. It's the best day of the year to do just about anything. I'm hoping, that in honor of my mom, who loved movies, that we will go to a theater and bask in the emptiness of the cinema. I'm really not sure what we will do, but I'm considering it a gift that the tenth anniversary is also on the most magical day of the year. What ever we do, I will be thinking about my mom, missing her and celebrating her by doing something that she would have loved.

I might even splash on a bit of Chanel No. 5. 

 

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tags: Big Anniversary, Anniversary of Mom's Death, Smells of my Childhood, Chanel No. 5, Glendale Police Department, How Organ Donation Works, Donating a Relatives organs, Glendale Police Department K-9 Unit Glendale, Valentine's Day, Super Bowl Sunday, Death of a Parent, Cancer Diagnosis, Dinah's Chicken Glendale, David Sedaris, Laurie Notaro, February 4th, Perfume Goes Off, What Does Chanel No. 5 Smell Like, Chanel Boutique San Francisco, Mills College Oakland, Airport Security Before 9/11, Watching Someone Die, Working for Universal Studios Hollywood, Bookcrossing, Kindness of Friends
categories: Life
Sunday 02.04.18
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Obligatory 2018 New Year's Resolution Post

It's time again to post my New Year's resolutions. I make various goals throughout the year (including a new resolution to eat better, which I started the first week in December), but I always like the idea of taking stock and starting fresh goals after the holidays.

First, let's check in with my 2017 resolutions and see what was or wasn't accomplished.

1. Finish my manuscript by the end of winter. = accomplished. I finished a first full draft and had my consultation with my mentor. I'm now slowly working through the revisions.

2. After receiving my manuscript notes from a UCLA Extension faculty member, use the notes to revise and polish my novel. Send my novel to potential agents. = Sort of. I'm still revising, not at the agent stage yet.

3. Finally figure out a sensible and effective writing schedule, which includes becoming more involved in my online writing group- submitting more, rather than just critiquing. = Fail. The online writing group was distracting, so I dropped it. My writing is spotty, in bursts and not consistent.

4. Submitting short stories and poems to contests/ journals. I'm not going to give myself a quota like last year, but I need to put myself out there.  = Sort of. I entered the NYC Midnight Short Story competition and passed the first two rounds. It was a lot of fun and I came away with two solid short stories.

5. Read a Minimum of 70 books. = Accomplished! I'm writing this review with a few weeks left in the year, but it looks like I'll end up with 78-79 books read. I also read many literary journals, not included in this count.

6. Cut out soda- This was a resolution that I stuck to for many years, but have slipped back into old habits this past year. Not that I drink a lot of soda, but still getting rid of empty, unhealthy calories.= Fail. I don't even remember this as a resolution for last year. Although, I have been soda free since December 1st. 

7. When not traveling, use apartment gym a minimum of three days a week. I hate exercising, but need to get back into the routine. I had an amazing exercise routine for nearly two years and I felt, looked fabulous. I need that back. = Major fail. I used the gym, but not consistently. I also joined a gym in Big bear, but I've already canceled the membership. Part of the problem is I got sciatica in May and I've not felt well every since. Yoga helped a little, but I'm still having lingering issues. 

8. Maintain a food diary and eat a minimum of five servings of fruits and veggies a day. This is for awareness, which will hopefully turn into healthy habits, something that's worked like a charm in the past. = Fail. Although I've been doing this for a few weeks and it does work!

9. Learn to enjoy living in Downtown Portland- get out of the apartment weekly to take advantage of what the city has to offer. Be present and active in our current living situation. = Sort of. I never learned to enjoy living in Portland, but we did make the most of it. We got out and saw things, attended local activities. My attitude did change towards living in Portland, but I was happy to move back to CA! I'm grateful for the experience of living in the Pacific North West and new friends made.

10. Travel to a new state or country ( or major city) = Yes! I went to Oklahoma City for the first time. We also visited Skagway, Alaska. We took many short trips around Oregon and Washington, seeing new things. My favorite was going to Astoria and seeing where one of my all-time favorite movies, The Goonies, was filmed.

11. Grow Travel Agency, by focusing on training, social media and the Easy as Pie Travel blog. I'm proud of what I've built so far and I've booked vacations for several clients, however, I want to be bigger. = Fail. We opted to close the travel agency, because it was more work than it was worth putting in to build. It distracted from my writing. No regrets with this one. Again, nothing to regret from the experience.

12. Grow the Always Packed for Adventure blog. Truly, this blog and it's readership has exceeded my expectations, but that makes me think that I can do even better.= Accomplished. My blog continues to grow in readership every month. It's exciting!

And now, time for those 2018 resolutions! I'm planning on starting most of these on January 8th, after my stepson finishes his visit with us for the holidays. I just want to have fun during his visit and not worry about schedules and goals.

1. Create a writing schedule with a focus on the revisions for my novel.

2. Finish revising my novel and begin sending it out to agents.

3. Maintain blogging schedule of every other day. This has been my normal schedule for years, but life got in the way this year and I didn't always stick to it. I felt guilty when I didn't.

4. Read 75 or more books.

5. Maintain a food log and eliminate soda.

6. Work on scanning old-family pictures. Try to get 1/4 of pictures scanned. This has been a resolution from years past that I never managed to accomplish. It's a big project.

7. Work on family genealogy project.

8. Super secret podcast idea- put into action! I'm very excited about this one.

9. Visit a new country, state or major city. 

10. Attend a writer's conference. I have my eye on the Las Vegas conference in the spring.

Happy 2018 and thank you for reading my blog! May your year be filled with happiness, good health, and new adventures!

tags: Obligatory New Years Resolution Post, My New Years Resolutions 2017, My New Years Resolutions 2018, New Years writing Resolutions, Writing Goals, Reading Resolutions, Genealogy Project, Las Vegas Writer's Conference, Blogging Schedule, Creating a New Podcast, New Years Health Goals
categories: Life
Monday 01.01.18
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

2017 Wrap-Up

We rang in 2017 with Dan's family in England! This was my first time spending the holidays in England, so it was wonderful to both be with family and to experience British traditions. Dan's sister's family treated us to a pantomime show, my first ever! We did a family trip to the Cadbury Factory and went to Warwick Castle. The weather was cold, but after spending a few months living in Portland, I handled it like a pro, meaning I finally own cold- weather appropriate clothes. 

The weather was bleak for most of our time in Portland. We bought a S.A.D. Lamp (which totally works) and popped vitamin D pills. I was not prepared for the affect that the seemingly endless days of grey skies would have on both my mood and energy levels. Coming from Los Angeles, I'm used to blue skies, sunshine, and things being open.

The weather shuts things down in Oregon. We had to wait until the late spring to experience many of the local national parks and theme parks. I love going to movies, but we really struggled to find winter activities that got us out of apartment that didn't include movie theaters, malls, and coffee. Again, all things I love, but growing up in Los Angeles, I definitely took for granted that living in a city with so many things to do. Portland is small. It doesn't have good sushi. It does have superior coffee. 

All of the locals told us to wait until summer. I was a little worried, because more than one local (I took an informal poll from whomever we came in contact with) told us that the summer weather starts after July 4th. Yikes! We started having nice days in May and by June, it was beautiful out. We went to Mount St. Helen's National Park ( closed sept-may) and Mount Hood. We visited Multnomah Falls, The Bridge of the Gods, and the Bonneville Dam Fishery. The Bonneville Dam is actually a really cool spot, you can see salmon jumping over locks and view Lamphrey, a fish that is made of nightmares. Look it up. We visited Astoria and Cannon Beach to see filming sites from The Goonies. The summer weather was beautiful and everyone in town seemed happier.

We did get out of Portland a few times before summer. In February, we went to our home in Big Bear and had friends stay with us. In April, we spent a week in Las Vegas for Dan's annual work trade show. He worked hard and I sunbathed. At the end of our Vegas week, we hosted friends from Portland at our Big Bear home. During spring break, our friends from Big bear visited Portland and we went on a short trip to Salem with them to do wine tasting!

Zoe and Felix stayed with us for six weeks during the summer. We had two mini-vacations during their stay. The first was one a Princess Cruise to Alaska. We wanted them to experience Alaska and glaciers, plus being in Portland, this was an easy trip for us. I thought the highlight was a rafting excursion near the Mendenhall Glacier. I've always wanted to go white water rafting and although this was a fairly mild excursion, we did get on class 3 rapids. So much fun! Skagway was a favorite town, that Dan I didn't experience during our previous Alaska cruise. In Skagway we ate lunch in a former brothel and saw one of the longest running stage plays in America. We also went to an Iditarod training camp and held husky puppies. In Ketchikan, we watched "The Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show,"= think medieval times, but with lumberjacks. The cruise also did a scenic journey through Glacier Bay National Park.

The other mini-vacation was a week in Las Vegas for pool time and extreme heat. It's just not summer with out the desert heat. We visited the Hoover Dam and saw Criss Angel's latest magic show at Luxor. In Portland, we took the kids to The Oaks Amusement Park for rollerskating and rides. They really loved the Portland Children's Museum too. A highlight was Dan's company picnic, which was held at Providence Park, home of the Portland Timbers. We were allowed to run around on the soccer pitch, where Zoe did endless rounds of cartwheels.

The same day that Zoe and Felix left, my mother-in-law arrived for a three week visit. This was her first time in Portland, so we made the rounds of the tourist sites. My favorite was having tea with her at the Japanese gardens. It was my 40th birthday during her visit, so we made a quick trip to Big Bear, so that she could see the house that was remodeled and I could be in California.

A few days after my mother-in-law left, we had our friends (Dave, Cath, and pug, Jewels) visit for the eclipse. We decided against driving twenty minutes to be in the "Path of Totality" and only experienced 99% of the eclipse. That 1% makes a difference. There was so much light. It was still neat, but not life-altering, as people were mentioning on the news.

In late August, we moved back to Big Bear. I miss our friends made in Portland, but I'm really happy to be back home. In September, I got a job in social media and marketing for one of the local vacation rental companies. Dan splits his time working from home and traveling to Portland to be in his office. I'm still working on my novel, in the revision stage after meetings with my mentor. Life is busy!

In September, I had an amazing opportunity. My friend Ryan and his wife Shawna, brought me to Oklahoma City to take part in their Ricochet: a Storyteller's Show podcast. The whole experience was incredible. It was also my first time visiting Oklahoma. I spent a day sightseeing, including the very emotional Oklahoma City Memorial. Everyone should make an effort to visit the memorial. Also visit Oklahoma City, it's pretty and the people are very friendly!

We spent our 4th anniversary at the La Quinta Resort and Spa in Palm desert. The entire weekend was spent in the sunshine, poolside in the "Ginger Rogers" pool. It's a beautiful resort with old-Hollywood glamour.

Thanksgiving was spent with a mix of old and new friends staying at our house. It was a super fun weekend and the turkey turned out. The Sunday after Thanksgiving, we went to Portland for a week. Dan had bought me tickets to see Bill Murray for my birthday and he was fantastic. We didn't see many live shows in 2017. We saw John Cleese, which was a major let-down and The Game of Thrones in concert, which was very cool. I went to a book signing for one of my favorite authors, Fredrik Backman. I also got to see a free mini-concert when the Old 97's came to the Skype Studio, just two blocks from our apartment.

This Christmas and New Years, we will have Felix with us, for his first solo-trip without Zoe. It was a last minute trip, so we don't have any plans, but I know it will be fun to have him here. He loves snow, so hopefully we will have a white Christmas. (I'm writing this early to post in the future, as I know we will be super busy when he arrives.) 2017 was an all-around good year and I'm looking forward to discovering what 2018 brings!

 

tags: 2017 Wrap up, 2017 Recap, British Christmas Traditions, British Pantomime Show, Warwick Castle, England Cadbury Factory, Living in Portland oREGON, Weather in Portland Oregon, S.A.D. Lamp, Living in Gloomy Weather, Bill Murray Live Show, Mount St. Helen's National Park, Mount Hood, Multnomah Falls, The Bridge of the Gods, The Bonneville Dam Fishery, The Goonies Filming Sites, The Goonies Cannon Beach, The Goonies Astoria, Lamphrey, Salmon Locks, Princess Cruise of Alaska, Mendenhall Glacier, White Water Rafting Alaska, Glacier Bay National Park, The Great Alaskan Lumberjack Show, Cris Angel, Providence Park, Portland Children's Museum, The Oaks Amusement Park, Portland Timbers, Big Bear Lake, Oregon Eclipse 2017, The Path of Totality, The Ricochet A Storytellers Podcast, First trip to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial, Ginger rogers Pool La Quinta Resort, John Cleese lIVE, Old 97's Skype Live Lounge, Fredrik Backman Powell's Books 2017, The Game of Thrones in Concert
categories: Life
Saturday 12.30.17
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 
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