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MomsMaterial has dedicated a special place to highlight a website, blog or product that we want to share with our readers. These MomsMaterial Friends (MMF) teach us, inspire us, make us laugh and cry. They may cause us to think about how we are making this a better place for our family and friends. Some help us make our lives easier or better with a product or idea. This is a place for us to highlight those MMF's and share.  If you have something to inspire or share with our MomsMaterial audience, please email us at cammie(at)MomsMaterial(dot)com.
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Jun 12

Written by: GuestBlogger
6/12/2009 3:53 PM 

montana_1990From Cammie: One of the things I like best about writing, is researching and reading the work of others.  I ran across this article on Jennifer's website/blog.  It is no surprise to me that she describes herself as a writer, and mentions she is working on her first novel.  I have a feeling she will become one of my favorite authors and I will be at the bookstore when she is published and her novel is released. 

Jennifer describes herself as a writer, parent and driver.  She states, "In my life, there's hardly anything that can't be made better by a little time behind the wheel. And then I write about it."

I found myself drawn to her writing immediately, but I had no idea what was in store.  I started off reading The Best of Thursday Drive.  I of course, headed straight to The Heavy Stuff, and I had to go through the series.  She recalls events that took place in her life, growing up with an abusive stepmother.  I read her entries like a book that I can't put down and want more.  Unfortunately, I had to get back to my kids, writing and my website.  

I am thrilled she has allowed me to reprint her article.  To read more of Jennifer's writing or find out more about her, please visit Thursday Drive.  I hope you enjoy this article and that it helps you find peace with your wrinkles. 

The Map

I sit in my office, at the  east-facing window, tweezers in one hand and a mirror in the other. The perfect light for some overdue eyebrow maintenance. Bright, natural light.

Forgiving, it isn’t.  (And talk about hairs apparent.)

After a few busy and painful moments, I finish. And then.

As I lean back from the mirror, I see what I missed with just an eyebrow at a time filling the mirror. The face reflected back at me looks tired and pale and…well, not young. (Don’t make me say it.)

In other rooms, where the light goes easier on me, I can look younger by a year or two, or even five if it’s late enough in the day and the sun not so bright. Or so I tell myself.

But in the light from this window at this hour, there’s not a single day shaved off my timeline. Every line, every shadow smudged there by the harder years - this last one among them - raises its voice. Here. Present, accounted for. You didn’t really think we wouldn’t show up, did you?

Well, I did hope.

And if one thing shows up, well, then you have to allow for every other damn thing, too. A faint but stubborn crease to the left of my nose from sleeping on one side of my face more than the other. A sun spot on the same cheek. Parentheses between my brows from giving stern looks to my children for lo, these many years. From stress, worry, disappointment.  Lines  that fan out from the corners of my eyes. All, things I’m not sure I’d miss if they disappeared.

But, this: If the tough parts of life take a stand around the eyes, how do you separate the worry lines from laugh lines? Part and parcel, I’m inclined to believe.

If that one hard year (or more) when you cried (more than you thought you ever could) can stake its claim at the corners of your eyes and in that spot between your brows, then shouldn’t all that was good get some credit as well?

Like the first time you saw for yourself the color of aspen leaves in the fall, when you squinted against the bright sun before it dropped low behind the mountains. Long days on the beach, when the sun was so bright that sunglasses and a hat (if you wore one) couldn’t keep out all the sun. First kisses, even the ones you can’t remember now, that left you smiling for days after. That full moon in Montana that lit up your brand new world. Laughing at your kids’ jokes when they’re funny and even when they’re not.

I’m not the first to compare a person’s face to a map, but today I couldn’t help thinking about an old Rand McNally Atlas that I’ve kept for years. Its pages are stained with coffee and scribbled over with yellow highlighter lines and red pen marks. I bought it when I lived in Connecticut, and used it for years as I drove all over the East Coast, back to the Midwest, and west to Montana. Around the edges, it’s as rough as rough gets. And that atlas is one of my favorite possessions. Every now and then, I worry (more lines) that I’ve lost it, and then it will turn up again.

It’s as true a journal of those years as anything I might have written in a notebook.

A detailed map shows the lines for all the roads, whether they’re sleek, well-maintained highways without bumps or ruts, or dirt roads with sections of washboard, or county roads with careless asphalt patches over potholes.

But if all of those roads lead somewhere new, they also lead back, sometimes very far, to other places. If  all the rough roads were closed to me, I think how much I would have missed. And if I’d only ever taken the smooth, easy ones? I’d be a little less road weary, maybe, but not me at all. I don’t think I’d like that girl as much. And if I have a few traces on my face to show for it? I’m not sure I mind.

And so, life. Impossible to separate what is from what might have been. No way to know if, had we lived a different life than this one - the one that gave us our laugh lines or our honest-to-god wrinkles -  whether we would have ended up with fewer lines to show for it or if we would have gotten quite lost.

Or, yes, found. There’s always that chance, too.

Unknowable things. None of which stop me from a close look in the mirror, or a gentle tug to see how this face might look if the lines were gone.

Or from looking backward down a quiet road, and wondering.

momsmaterial

Cammie Moise

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11 comment(s) so far...

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

What a wonderful way to explain those wrinkles I am seeing more and more of. I am just going to remember when I see them that they were mostly made by good events...things I can look back on with a smile. There, that's what did it....all those smiles...thank goodness there are more smile wrinkles than worry ones. I am ready to read more from Jennifer Harvey!!! And I am going to share this article with my friends.

By Mom 22 on   6/12/2009 4:43 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

This is a great way to look at growing older and seeing more wrinkles. We did a family picture this week (for our church directory) and viewed them on the salespersons computer monitor afterwards. I didn't recognize the mom in the picture, even though it was me. It looked like an older woman sitting next to my husband. Now I realize it was a mom tired out from the years of laughing and crying! Thanks for posting this.

By Becca on   6/13/2009 8:14 AM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

My hope is always for a few more laugh lines than frown lines--I think that's the most you can hope for. People that don't feel are the only ones with blank, unlined faces.

By Jenn @ Juggling Life on   6/13/2009 10:48 AM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Thanks everyone, for the kind words. And Cammie, thank you again for posting this. You made my day. I've got the smile lines to prove it. :-)

By Jennifer Harvey on   6/13/2009 3:07 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

I LOVE JENNIFER. Now I am all sad I wasn't the one to introduce the two of you. I can't wait for Jennifer's book...or her country music song.

By Texasholly on   6/14/2009 9:35 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Jenn is one of the most talented writers I know, she has a beautiful perspective on the world.

By Suzanne on   6/15/2009 12:57 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Aw, thanks, both of you. Love you back.

By Jennifer H on   6/15/2009 5:31 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

I have to say I see the lines on my face and it makes me want to cry and yet you are right. If all the roads had been smooth where would I be and hell if I'd have anything to blog about.

By jessica on   6/15/2009 11:10 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Fantastic post!

You have stumbled upon one of my favorite bloggers/writers! You'll have to race me to the bookstore when Jennifer's books hit the shelves!

By Margaret (Nanny Goats) on   6/16/2009 9:18 PM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Margaret - We have to get Jennifer writing on her book again after she gets settled from moving! And I will be happy to race you to the bookstore when she gets published! We will have to have a race to the bookstore, read and review party!

Jessica - it does make me realize it is part of who I am. And in the blogging world you reach the most people when you are honest and you blog about the good, the bad and the ugly. I will check out your site, too!

Jenn@ Juggling Life - the ones with the blank unlined faces either don't feel or they just received their Botox! : )

TexasHolly - You have already introduced me to many great things! I wasn't surprised when I found out the two of you were connected!

Becca - you are beautiful and look fantastic! I can't imagine you looking tired because I always see you with a smile on your face!

Mom22 - Thank you for sharing the article with your friends. I loved the comments you received from some of them. Also, I am sure your children caused you many worry lines when they were growing up, but now I hope it is all happy and fun! : )

By Cammie (MomsMaterial) on   6/18/2009 1:36 AM

Re: The Map by Jennifer Harvey Helps Me Make Peace With My Wrinkles

Jessica, Exactly my lovely friend...

Margaret and Cammie - you're making me blush and giving me a good kick in the arse at the same time, which is awesome. Thank you. :-)

By Jennifer H on   6/19/2009 11:57 PM

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