Friday, June 19, 2009

The published article!

Adopted at 17
What's the most loving memory you have of your dad? For Katie Simonson, orphaned at 17, it was the moment Mike Fieseler took her in and became the new father she so desperately needed.


By Kate Simonson with Meghan Daum

(
REAL SIMPLE) -- The summers of my youth were filled with the kinds of activities that were common to every kid in the 80s but are considered almost death-defying these days: tree climbing, bike riding without a helmet, and daylong road trips spent in the backseat of the family car, where we bounced around like Super Balls, nary a seat belt in sight.

Still, my mother was safety-obsessed about some things, like swimming lessons. Year after year, she forced me to take them at our local pool in Iowa City. Having to go against my will seemed all the more unfair to me, since my mother could not swim and was actually afraid of the water.
But my mother reasoned that if water came between her children and their safety, she would be helpless.


"I can't save you," she would calmly state in answer to my pleas to bow out of the lessons. "So I'm going to do everything in my power to make sure you can save yourself."

It's no wonder she embraced this philosophy of self-reliance. She knew how unexpectedly life can rob you of someone you care about. My parents adopted me as an infant and went on to have a biological child -- my brother, Jason -- a couple of years later.

My dad was an electrician, and he died in an accident on the job when I was three. After his death, my mother had to raise us alone, and she was acutely aware that she was truly on her own, with no backup plan. She was fiercely strong and yet constantly fearful.

I have almost no memories of my father. Instead I remember Mike Fieseler. He was a former industrial-arts teacher whom my mother dated off and on for much of my childhood. Jason and I weren't his biggest fans. He was a man of strict rules, while my mom's approach could be more properly deemed overindulgent leniency.

We resented having to share the spotlight with him -- a sentiment that was particularly strong every Christmas morning, when we had to wait for him to arrive before we could open gifts. (There is little a man can do to endear himself to children less than delaying Christmas-morning gratification.) And when they stopped dating, when I was 15, I wasn't unhappy to see him go.

Then, on February 18, 1991, when I was 17, my mother suddenly died of a brain aneurysm. One minute she was laughing with friends, enjoying an evening out; the next, she was unconscious on the floor. She never woke up. Just 19 hours later, she was dead, leaving my 15-year-old brother and me orphans.

In the moments of shock and horror that followed, my relatives all gathered in the hospital, and I went home with only a close friend for company (Jason followed a while later). We spent that night on our own. I was numb; it had all happened so fast. I could barely think beyond the immediate moment.

The next morning, my grandfather, aunts, and uncles were still immersed in their own mourning. Shell-shocked as I was, I knew I had to let people know what had happened. I saw my mother's address book lying where she had set it only days before and started dialing. One of the phone numbers I found was Mike's.

Even though he lived about an hour away, it felt like he was there in an instant. As soon as he walked in, he took charge -- and took care of Jason and me. Among other small kindnesses, he gave me a credit card and said, "Why don't you buy something to wear to the funeral?" He gave me permission to be a 17-year-old -- to focus on the more mundane issue of what I was going to wear instead of weighty adult concerns.

Generally, when children are orphaned, a family member comes forward to take them in. This didn't happen in our case. Everyone had a good reason, I suppose. My mom's father was too old to assume responsibility for us; my mother's sister and her husband had three kids of their own and weren't able to take in any others; her other two siblings were both single and worked long hours. The guardian named in my mother's will was a babysitter that none of us had seen in 15 years.

But I can tell you this: Abandonment, even for very good reasons, feels awful. It was heartbreaking and terrifying to have lost the person we loved most and then to be set adrift.
Months passed and it felt like our relatives could offer no reassurances. The only news we got was that if Jason and I remained without a guardian, we would have to enter foster care. Our mother was gone, and there was nothing we could do to save ourselves.


And, once again, there was Mike. After the funeral, he was a constant presence. He made sure that food filled the cupboards, the bills were paid, and the lawn was mowed. (Mike's adult daughter, Linda, pitched in and took care of his house.) He made sure I went back to school even when it was the last thing I wanted to do. His overbearing personality -- the trait I had hated the most -- is what comforted me the most and got me through those difficult days.

Mike says that Linda came up with the idea to make his role with Jason and me official -- he could become our guardian. He was on board right away. Mike still says he never considered not doing it; caring for us was simply the right thing to do. One day he made us his offer. In a moment where the grief of loss and the pain of being unwanted threatened to capture my very breath, this man, whose only tie to us was having dated my mother, said he would be honored to take us in.

From that moment on, everything was different. His girlfriend, Patty, threw us a "guardian party" when the paperwork became official. It was just a small gathering, but it made us feel special. I received a key chain with my initials, and I remember thinking that the idea behind it was so lovely.

Over the years, Mike has become not merely a legal guardian but a real father to me. When I fell into depression in college, unable to get past thoughts of my mother and all I had lost, he was there to listen.

When my husband, Eric, and I bought our first house, Mike spent weekends installing insulation and repairing our gutters. He never wrote me off as a good, mature kid who could handle everything herself. He walked the line between trusting me and recognizing when I might need help. And what more could you want from a father than that?
His was an unconventional path to parenthood, to say the least. It is not by birth or adoption that I consider this man to be my father; it isn't even through his presence in my childhood. It is rather by sheer good luck on my part.


Before he made that generous offer, I felt as though I had lost my mooring and the waters were flooding in; afterward, I simply felt rescued. If my mother had taught me to be strong and depend on myself, Mike imparted his own lesson -- that the world will provide for you, even when you least expect it.

Eight years after Mike stepped forward, he walked me down the aisle. Four years after that, I gave birth to his first granddaughter, Emily Michl Simonson. (Mike's legal name is Michl.) The name is a reminder of my saved past and a promise for the future, and I hope one day Emily will see that as well. Because as much as I plan to teach her to swim (indeed, she's now six and enrolled in lessons), I also want her to know this: No matter how fast the waters rise, no matter how hard it may be to keep her head above the waves, someone will throw her a line.

Here are the links: Real Simple: http://www.realsimple.com/work-life/life-strategies/inspiration-motivation/adopted-at-17-00000000016015/index.html

CNN.com: http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/personal/06/19/rs.mom.died.boyfriend.adopts/index.html?iref=hpmostpop



Wednesday, June 10, 2009

Big news, good and bad....

It was the best of times and the worst of times... has someone already used that?

In any case, the best of times: THE ARTICLE IS OUT! If you are so inclined pick up the July issue of Real Simple and on page 162 you will find my first article in a national magazine! Plus big, full-color photos of me and the family too.

The worst of times: Clearly a blog is not the place to do this but I can't call everyone so here goes for those who don't already know. Last Wednesday I got the results of my latest MRI and, while the tumors on my spinal cord don't seem to have grown or multiplied since last fall, they did find a brain tumor. It is in the center of my brain and therefore surgery is not an option. I will have Gamma Knife Radiosurgery the first week of July. I am mostly okay and I am hopeful that everything will turn out alright. I’m not really sure what else to say but if you have any questions feel free to ask.


Thank you to everyone who has sent me their wishes and prayers. It means the world to me that I have such wonderful friends and such a caring community!

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

A personal ad for Eric

I have noticed a husband-bashing backlash lately and it’s not sitting well with me. If I have to hear one more woman tell me that they are blissfully happy with their husbands I think that I might throw up. I mean really, is that what everyone else’s marriages are like? If not I think that we are doing a disservice to just-getting-by wives out there by pretending. Or maybe what I need to do is take a personal ad out on behalf of my husband. Something along the lines of:

MWM seeking WF 35-45. Me: Smart, kind, hard-working, long-suffering. You: Drug and disease free, able to live without piling all belongings on every available horizontal surface in house, also without homicidal thoughts when I mention unwashed dishes. James Taylor fans need not apply.

The first time I saw Eric I was a seventeen-year-old waitress in a dumpy Country Kitchen restaurant in a college town and he was a twenty-five-year-old going-to-be philosophy grad student. He was the high school friend of the boyfriend of a woman that I worked there with.

For weeks before Eric’s arrival in town the other waitress had been telling me that she was dying to have a threesome with her boyfriend and another of their friends, a man I will call Henry. Now it would not be much of a stretch to say that I was significantly more naive than kids seem to be today and the very idea that someone was telling me that they were fantasizing about having sex with two people at the same time was almost more than my sweet little ears could bear to hear. Let me just say that I am over that now... I even have basic cable, so you can just imagine the things I have seen by now.

Anyway, one day the three men came in and sat down with Eric and Henry on one side of the booth facing our waitress station and the boyfriend on the other side, facing away from us. The other waitress came up to me and pointed the table out. “There they are,” she said. “That’s Henry.” She motioned to the two people at the table I hadn’t met before.

I am not kidding when I tell you that my breath literally caught in my chest as I looked up at the men at the table. “Oh,” I said, “I can see why you are so attracted to him. He is the most beautiful man I have ever seen.”

The other waitress looked at me with eyes rolling, sighed and said, “Not him. That’s Eric. Henry is the other one.”

Now, while I find this a sweet story about the first meeting I had the man who would later become my husband and the father of my three children, Henry, who is still a close friend, isn’t a big fan of the story since, as he points out, the other waitress didn’t ask which man I was talking about, she just assumed (correctly) that I was swooning over Eric. I would like to take this opportunity to say that Henry is a wonderful man as well. He is kind and attractive and I don’t really have any reason to believe that he screens my phone calls despite my penchant for talking on and on, which also makes him a good, if not all that bright, friend.

That said, I was thinking of this story today because I was reminded of a funny analogy that I had once seen in a movie. In it one of the characters said that she always pictured marriage like a stick that both people are holding on to. Sometimes, she said, your hands are close enough together that you can look into each other’s eyes, but sometimes you are so far apart that you can hardly see each other, but still, you are both always holding on. If that analogy were Eric and me, I would have to say that each of our ends of the stick are in different states at the moment. I am just so deep in the work and angst of motherhood that I am perfectly useless to him right now. Perhaps worse than that is the fact that I am too tired to care much about my uselessness.

From a distance it seems that I have every reason to be one of those women that waxes on. I mean if I made a pro/con list about Eric the pro side would fill pages and pages. For example:
1. He is a great dad. I mean he has seemingly endless patience for wrestling and lifting giggling kids and outside play that I have no interest it. He never gives you the feeling that he would rather be doing something less “girly” when playing with the girls.
2. He has taken a job making much less than he could get in the private sector in order to do the kind of work he believes is valuable. And there isn’t a day that goes by that he isn’t giving his all to that job.
3. He actually gets notes from victims whose assailants he has prosecuted telling him that he is a hero. Seriously, he is an actual hero to people.
And the list would go on and on and on like that.

And you know what? The con list would be about one item long, but it would be in all capital letters:
1. THAT FACE HE MAKES WHEN HE COMES HOME FROM WORK AND SEES THAT THE DINNER/ DISHES/ LAUNDRY ISN’T DONE.

He may be the most beautiful man I have ever seen (and honestly my breath still catches when I see him out somewhere unexpectedly), and he may be someone’s hero but it is all I can do to not kill him in his sleep when he says a word to me about the house or the ever growing pile of magazines I keep meaning to read but instead insist on keeping on the floor by the couch. I am not saying that he doesn’t have a valid point, anyone that has been to our house knows that without Eric I would become Sarah Cynthia Sylvia Stout… but still.

I am happy, don’t get me wrong, but not blissfully so. I can’t be the only wife out there who feels that this time in our lives feels more like slogging through with a comrade-in-arms rather than dancing along with my soul mate. I think that he would agree.

Maybe it’s the fact that the balance of power is totally thrown off when one of you does a highly respected job and the other one cooks, cleans, and plays endless rounds of “I Spy” in clinic waiting rooms. Maybe it’s that as a nursing, co-sleeping mom my body isn’t mine and hasn’t been for years.

But the good news is that neither of us is going anywhere-- no personal ads have been placed. After all, that threesome didn’t seem like a good idea then and seems like an even worse idea now. I think we’ll stick it out with each other and our basic cable.