Thursday, March 25, 2010

Changes

After Charlotte, I wanted everything to change. I quit my job. We contemplated moving (but instead just repainted and rearranged furniture). I lost touch with friends and moved into different circles. Everything did change, over time.

I remember reading (somewhere?) that you should wait for at least a year after a loss before making any drastic changes in your life. I had been planning to quit my job anyway, so I figured that was ok. We didn't move. I found another job in the same field. Time passed.

Then Adam came. Everyone told us, over and over, what a change that would bring into our lives. I was surprised how little things actually did change. Sure, it takes me longer to get out of the house than it used to and our living room is taken over by large plastic apparatuses, but I feel a lot less changed now than I did before/after Charlotte. Perhaps I already knew the biggest lesson of parenthood: how it feels to have a child be the center of your life. It's a lot easier when that child is alive.

Now that the 2-year mark is looming, I feel like I have some perspective. I don't think my decisions now are made out of grief, but are real, true decisions. I have decided to go back to school. I actually decided this early last summer, while still pregnant, and have been taking a couple of prerequisites this year. Starting in September, I'll be taking a full-time program in nursing.

If three years ago someone had told me I would be doing this, I would never, ever have believed them. I was (am) a musician- as artsy as it gets. I make a living by doing what all musicians do- a little teaching, a little gigging, a bit of everything. It's a labor of love, and requires so much passion to do it well. After Charlotte, I lost the passion.

When she died, my love for music died too. That didn't come out right. I still love music, but in not the same way. I no longer have the patience to sit and work through one phrase of Beethoven for hours at a time to get every note exactly right, to find the hidden meaning behind the notes. Before, it was worthwhile. Now, there are so many more important things in life. I need a change.

So, nursing it is. I don't know what discipline of nursing I want to explore, but I do know from a patient's perspective how important a nurse can be. Like you all, I had great, wonderful nurses and also horrible ones. I hope to be one of those wonderful ones.

So, a new chapter for me. We'll see where I go.

6 comments:

loribeth said...

Congratulations on the new direction, Heather. Sounds like you've given it some serious thought & that this is a good direction for you. I'll bet you're going to make a great nurse!!

Hope's Mama said...

Great to hear, Heather.
So happy to hear your voice again. You are so right - so good to have a child as the centre of your attention who is actually alive and needing you.
xo

caitsmom said...

Wow, Heather. New directions . . . (I too had difficulty with music after my daughter died. I still can't sing much anymore, but now I'm learning to play the cello.) Best to you as you embark on new things. Peace.

Michelle said...

Good for you!!!!! I think you will be a GREAT nurse. I am excited and happy for you with all the new things happening in your life. It is great to hear!

Donna said...

That's really wonderful. After what you have been through you will make a wonderful nurse!

Cate said...

oh, good news. I think you will be a wonderful nurse.