It’s a big job, but it can be done

Mrs. Esther Grosvenor taught the Colfax High School seniors their last English class before they graduated and embarked upon the world to conquer whatever it was they thought lay before them. While the 17 and 18 year old students in her class spent more time counting the days until graduation than they did counting their verbs and nouns, Mrs. G. (as we affectionately called her), nevertheless, persevered in her job in assigning the task of diagramming sentences and drilling the rows of pimple-faced boys and girls on the difference in meaning between affect and effect, lie and lay, and simile and metaphor.

If she was inpatient with the impertinence of us she didn’t show it. After 40 plus years in the classroom, Mrs. Grosvenor had developed enough equanimity about her job that not much fazed her in her interactions with children disguised as adults.

When I finished her class and Colfax High School in 1984, I also left the town for the bright city lights of Des Moines. Six weeks after I walked across the gymnasium stage, my parents had sold the-old-Miss-Byal house where we lived and packed up the green Chevy pick-up and moved us off to the town where both of them worked for the city government.

After I moved to Des Moines, I wrote to Mrs. Grosvenor. I don’t remember the details of my letter to her; likely, I thanked her for attending my graduation reception and made mention of my move. Based on her response to me, I must have had questions about the role of women in the work force.  It’s been 30 years since I graduated from high school, and I have kept her letter tucked away in a small cedar box.

It’s because of our move for my husband’s promotion for work, that I had the chance to reread the letter. In this move I am following my husband for his work and I am unclear as to what my professional place is. Mrs. Grosvenor’s words are more apropos now than when she originally wrote them. Her perspective on women in the workforce was formed from her own life experiences and long before feminism became a topic of conversation and debate in our popular culture.

As I settle into a new phase in my roles as wife, mother, daughter, and employee, her words provide a gentle reminder of the importance of finding the right balance. The past few years were rigorous in tending to all of my family members and embarking in a second career as a mental health counselor.

We are in the beginning stages of our family’s transition. Many details have yet to be decided upon. But just like they were 30 years ago, Mrs. G.’s words are encouraging to me. I’ll keep hanging in there and like Mrs. G. vowed for herself as she expressed her apprehension about the change she was about to seek for herself, “maybe I’ll finish that novel I started some years back.”

Mrs G page 1

Mrs G page 2Mrs G page 3

Courage

My friend, Linda Grau Powell, is a poet, artist, educator, and entrepreneur from Plains, TX. She has a rich soul and generously shares herself with others who cross her path. I hope you will enjoy this brief encounter with her.

October 22, 2014–Copyright © 2014 by Linda Grau Powell

photo (1)Courage is putting on wings

Attaching them with tears

Softening, dissolving

My healing heart

Connecting to all

Knowing I am love

Ethereal as my flight

Into the unbolted

Center of beingness

Experiencing my loveliness

Accepting my weaknesses

Fearless with joy

I circle and glide

Free to be

Free to be me

Free to love me

Free to forgive me

For forgetting myself

Over and over again

When I crash land

And break my wings

And break my spirit

And lose me.

Choosing tools to build a community

HerbTheVegetarianDragon_PB_W_1 Thank you if you make your way to my website www.greatlifegifts.com and choose to look around. What is the website about? At the moment I am in transition because I am about to move from Hobbs, NM, to Houston, TX, for a job promotion for my husband and so some components of my website are shifting, too.

During my time in Hobbs, I earned my master’s in education in mental health counseling and I had started to build a good practice with Zia Consulting. I have immense gratitude towards the owners Drs. Mike and Marianne Westbrook who have guided me in building a solid foundation in the field of mental health counseling.

However, since I am moving across state lines, my ability to practice in the field of mental health will be on hiatus for awhile until I meet the licensing requirements for the state of Texas. Since this move is in support of my husband’s career, my role for a time will be complementary. I will be focusing on my role as a mother to my two sons and as a caretaker daughter to my mother.

itookthemoonforawalk_pb_wBut I can’t not work. I am wired to work. So, I decided to become a founding member ambassador for Barefoot Books. This is the second time around I have affiliated myself with this award winning publisher of children’s books. The first time, I bought the starter kit while I was pregnant at the age of 42. So, while I had some good intention at that time, I didn’t have quite the stamina I needed to build much of anything and I was finishing up my master’s degree.

But I used the books. Boy! Did I use and am using the books with my little guy. “I Took the Moon for a Walk” became our favorite with its beautiful illustrations and poetic plot. “Herb the Vegetarian Dragon” has a humorous cadence in discussing understanding differences.

My purpose with Barefoot Books is to build a community in Houston for our family. All of us have tools available to help build a community and for now I am choosing the tool of helping build literacy for young families.

You also see a  few selections of my professional portfolio, here. I have invested a large portion of my adult life in the field of public relations within the non-profit sector. My portfolio is documentation of my contribution to the field.

So, as my life is currently in flux, so is this website and my professional life. I have tools and enthusiasm for the new venture that we are about to embark on as a family. As things settle and all my family members become comfortable in the roles the universe is calling us to do, I am certain my place will be apparent, too.

In the meantime, I sincerely encourage you to reach out to me because whether or not I have a state approved mental health license I have a kind heart and open mind to listen to your journey and to help you open your Gift of a Great Life!

How to move your crazy family across the country without going insane

wherever you goChange is ALWAYS on the horizon. How do you cope when major change occurs in your life? While we hope our journey is full of smooth sailing, that’s not always possible. Sometimes storms and ocean waves pop up unexpectedly.

Over the next few weeks, I will share with you how I am managing the stress of a big cross country move (moving across the entire state of Texas is like a cross country move) that involves two sons, a husband, my mother, a dog, two hermit crabs, and two fish.

I’m keeping my fingers crossed that we laugh more than we cry…but whether we’re laughing or crying, I’ll clue you in on how a licensed mental health counselor keeps her sanity in the chaos of a big family move.