Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Year 26...Still hanging in there with Luis G. Lobo!


Luis G. Lobo and I are married 26 years today. Now I could sit and write all about our beautiful love story and how he's the best thing that ever happened in my life and how we will love each other until the end of time. Well some of that is true! But let's be honest here! In 26 years of marriage, you've seen the good, the bad, and the ugly! 

Over 26 years, Luis G. Lobo and I have loved, grown, loved, changed, loved, argued, loved, raised children, loved, traveled to absolutely amazing places, loved, had thoughts of packing a small bag and going on a sabbatical...for like a year...alone, loved, disagreed, loved...and this list could go on and on and on! But if you notice, there is a common thread...26 years of LOVE! 26 years is a long time to be stuck with one person. Oh wait, did I say stuck? Well not stuck in a marriage, or stuck with each other, but we have stuck together like glue! Through thick and thin we stick together like a bottle of Gorilla Glue! 

TEAM LOBO was officially formed on April 30, 1988, but I think the real deal for TEAM LOBO was sealed with the birth of our second child, Andres, in 1992. Not because he was born, but the timing of his birth. Four weeks after Andres was born, Luis was transferred and we were moving from one state to another. So we decided this might be a good time for me to become a stay home Mom! Upon arriving to our new home, Thomas was starting 2nd grade and Andres was 12 weeks old. 

Not going to lie; becoming a stay home mom was a huge adjustment for me! I loved working! I loved getting up every day, getting dressed up, going out into the world and talking to adult people. So basically I cried at some point of the day, every day, for about a year. Luis would come home and say, "My goodness, just go back to work! You don't have to be a stay home mom! The children will be fine whatever you do!" And I knew he was right, but I would cry harder and say, "But what kind of mother doesn't want to stay home with her baby, and be the class mom for her 2nd graders class, and be a PTA board member... and PTA president??? Like what kind of mother has this opportunity and doesn't just jump at the chance and thank God for it every day???" Well eventually I got there, and became a VERY happy stay home mom and have never looked back.

OK, so back to 26 years of marriage... Upon settling into being a stay home mom, Luis and I truly became TEAM LOBO! Luis cleared the way for me to put all focus on our children, our home and being a community volunteer working almost full time for many organizations over the years. He has always called me a domestic engineer, and even when I say, I'm good with being called a stay home mom, he says, no way, you are so much more. And I cleared the way for Luis to focus on his career. It has been 26 years of hard work on both of our parts. Luis works 60 plus hours a week, he travels, he is also out in the community, volunteering and doing amazing things, and most of all he is a great Dad! I handle every other aspect of our lives from buying and selling our homes and cars, to uprooting our family and moving us 7 times, to house repairs, raising the children, etc., etc., etc., you name it and I do it.  Luis does his thing, I do my thing, and together we support each other in our perspective roles on TEAM LOBO. I do believe each of us supporting the other has made all the difference in our 26 years of marriage.


What I can tell you about 26 years of teamwork is it has paid off big time. TEAM LOBO has three beautiful children who we could not be more proud of and 2 beautiful grand children...so far, yes we want more in the future. We are also raising our nephew who will turn 12 this May. We are very proud of him as well. Together we have built a life, a home, and we have both worked hard to support the communities in which we have lived.  

So here's to TEAM LOBO!!! We march on through the good, the bad and the ugly! Why? Because when it comes down to it, through thick and thin, there is one common thread; LOVE. And LOVE always wins!




Wednesday, March 26, 2014

March 26, 2014 ...Two years later





WOW, I can’t believe how fast two years flew by,
like a silent breeze hiding in the sky.
From a 9 year old boy arriving at the end of 4th grade,
who didn’t know any math, and oh my, would he even pass?
To an 11 year old 6th grader who has all A’s, 
and has blossomed like a flower from a field of clay.
A child who did not know us two years ago.
A child we have nurtured and watched him grow.
He had to adjust to the Lobo rules.
Number one, there is no exception when it comes to school!
More rules to follow, just to name a few:
“No you are not 13, so PG is the limit you!”
and “We don’t do picky eaters so eat your vegetable soup!”
Yes Sir, No Sir, Yes Ma’am, No Ma’am.
Holding doors and umbrellas, doing dishes and cooking,                                        oh and clean that room, Aunt Debbie will come looking.
A house filled with structure and big expectations;
“Andres, Aunt Debbie don’t play that”                                                                     to “Uncle Luis, (with encyclopedia in hand) can you please explain that!”
He continues to astound us with his brains and his wit.
Such a hard worker… he does not know the words I quit.
This child has amazed us! He has brought us such joy!
He has exceeded all expectations, we are so proud of this boy.
A child that now shines like a star in the sky.
A child named Andres Arce Lobo, the apple of our eye!
Our family has embraced him, we surround him with love.
A child moving forward in a life full of hope and promise,
he fits our family like a glove.
So spread your wings Andres Arce, and soar like a bird.
Grasp every opportunity, and do not be deterred! 
                      
 The Lobo family stands behind you like a pack of wolves!




March 26, 2012 - An unexpected surprise

A little boy of 9 years old
Came along and stole our heart and soul
It was fast and unexpected, but no thought was needed
We had always loved him from the very beginning
He hopped on a plane all alone
Flew through the skies to a life unknown
He rubbed his eyes, but did not cry
He was strong and brave, his courage astounding
We welcomed him with open arms to his new surroundings
He is sweet and loving and smart, oh so bright
With him he brings immeasurable light
We are simply delighted and feel so blessed
To have him come to our empty nest
We will love him and nurture him in our home
The future yet to be written in stone, but now and forever he may call it his own.
Andres Arce Lobo, the bravest little boy I have ever known
I am in awe of your bravery, your courage, your fortitude!!!



Tuesday, February 4, 2014

PERSPECTIVE BRINGS UNDERSTANDING - I READ A GREAT ARTICLE TODAY - RUSSELL BRAND: MY LIFE WITHOUT DRUGS

I saw the article posted at the end of this blog, "Russell Brand: my life without drugs", on a friend's Facebook page.  Most of what I know about Russell Brand is that he is an actor, comedian and radio host. One thing I did not know is he is an accomplished author. I was blown away when reading his article. Not only is it very well written, it is very powerful! I find it worth sharing.

I think most of us know someone, family member, or friend along the way, who has struggled with alcohol and/or drug addiction. Russell Brand's story really puts addiction in perspective! Understanding addiction is difficult, and the words, "OMG why doesn't he/she just get their life together," have flung from my lips on more than one occasion. Of course, I'm in the majority, those of us who can have "a" drink and not feel the need to have another. For the addicted, "a" drink becomes a bottle, or two, or worse. It is a disease, an ugly disease, and understanding that can be challenging because we just want them to stop! Get their crap together! Reading this article helped to clarify my understanding; it's not that easy.

Even this past Sunday when I heard about the passing of Philip Seymour Hoffman, I was like, my God, are you kidding me! Really?!? Seriously?!? I don't even personally know Philip Seymour Hoffman, but man, I love his work, his talent, and he just seemed like such a wonderful person and beautiful father to his children, and wow, now I, we all, will miss all the wonderful roles he could have portrayed to us as only he, Philip Seymour Hoffman, with soooo much talent could have played! Hearing he died with a needle in his arm made me feel not only sad, but well, a little mad...like wow, 23 years clean, how the hell did he let this happen! ANOTHER great talent lost way too soon.

Closer to home in my little corner of the world, I have a number of friends, a family member or two, and know of numerous acquaintances who have suffered with addiction; alcohol and/or drugs. They are from all walks of life, from poverty to wealthy. Some hide it well, others do not. More than a handful of them have died, and way too young including a couple of people from my high school that came from wonderful families. I  envisioned they would go forth and do great things in life, but they got caught up in the alcohol/drug cycle, could never get out and died in their 40's. It's a sad, sad story that repeats itself in many families. Even though most of us will never truly understand how addiction can take over a person's life, reading Russell Brand's account of, "My life without drugs" put a better understanding of addiction in perspective for me. If you know someone struggling, maybe it will help you as well.

ADDED NOTES/INSIGHTFUL WORDS FROM MY DAUGHTER FELICIA!
1. Philip Seymour Hoffman changed the acting world in a way. He figured out how to make his characters human. That's why his death has been so hard on me personally. Even though I never met him, I felt like I knew who he was as a human being from his work, which cannot be said about most actors!
2. I think there is something else to be said about addiction. Not only can we not judge a person that became the addicted, we cannot judge WHY they started using drugs or alcohol in the first place. You never know what is going on a person's life, what pain they have tearing at them. Sometimes drugs and/or alcohol seem not only the easiest, but the only way to escape the pain.

Below is the article. A little long but well worth the read. I have also posted the link.

http://www.theguardian.com/culture/2013/mar/09/russell-brand-life-without-drugs

Russell Brand: my life without drugs
26th Annual ARIA Awards 2012 - Award Winner Portraits
'I cannot accurately convey to you the efficiency of heroin in neutralising pain.' Photograph: Mark Nolan/WireImage
The last time I thought about taking heroin was yesterday. I had received "an inconvenient truth" from a beautiful woman. It wasn't about climate change – I'm not that ecologically switched on – she told me she was pregnant and it wasn't mine.
I had to take immediate action. I put Morrissey on in my car as an external conduit for the surging melancholy, and as I wound my way through the neurotic Hollywood hills, the narrow lanes and tight bends were a material echo of the synaptic tangle where my thoughts stalled and jammed.
Morrissey, as ever, conducted a symphony, within and without and the tidal misery burgeoned. I am becoming possessed. The part of me that experienced the negative data, the self, is becoming overwhelmed, I can no longer see where I end and the pain begins. So now I have a choice.
I cannot accurately convey to you the efficiency of heroin in neutralising pain. It transforms a tight, white fist into a gentle, brown wave. From my first inhalation 15 years ago, it fumigated my private hell and lay me down in its hazy pastures and a bathroom floor in Hackney embraced me like a womb.
This shadow is darkly cast on the retina of my soul and whenever I am dislodged from comfort my focus falls there.
It is 10 years since I used drugs or drank alcohol and my life has improved immeasurably. I have a job, a house, a cat, good friendships and generally a bright outlook.
The price of this is constant vigilance because the disease of addiction is not rational. Recently for the purposes of a documentary on this subject I reviewed some footage of myself smoking heroin that my friend had shot as part of a typically exhibitionist attempt of mine to get clean.
I sit wasted and slumped with an unacceptable haircut against a wall in another Hackney flat (Hackney is starting to seem like part of the problem) inhaling fizzy, black snakes of smack off a scrap of crumpled foil. When I saw the tape a month or so ago, what is surprising is that my reaction is not one of gratitude for the positive changes I've experienced but envy at witnessing an earlier version of myself unencumbered by the burden of abstinence. I sat in a suite at the Savoy hotel, in privilege, resenting the woeful ratbag I once was, who, for all his problems, had drugs. That is obviously irrational.
The mentality and behaviour of drug addicts and alcoholics is wholly irrational until you understand that they are completely powerless over their addiction and unless they have structured help they have no hope.
This is the reason I have started a fund within Comic Relief, Give It Up. I want to raise awareness of, and money for, abstinence-based recovery. It was Kevin Cahill's idea, he is the bloke who runs Comic Relief. He called me when he read an article I wrote after Amy Winehouse died. Her death had a powerful impact on me I suppose because it was such an obvious shock, like watching someone for hours through a telescope, seeing them advance towards you, fist extended with the intention of punching you in the face. Even though I saw it coming, it still hurt when it eventually hit me.
What was so painful about Amy's death is that I know that there is something I could have done. I could have passed on to her the solution that was freely given to me. Don't pick up a drink or drug, one day at a time. It sounds so simple. It actually is simple but it isn't easy: it requires incredible support and fastidious structuring. Not to mention that the whole infrastructure of abstinence based recovery is shrouded in necessary secrecy. There are support fellowships that are easy to find and open to anyone who needs them but they eschew promotion of any kind in order to preserve the purity of their purpose, which is for people with alcoholism and addiction to help one another stay clean and sober.
Without these fellowships I would take drugs. Because, even now, the condition persists. Drugs and alcohol are not my problem, reality is my problem, drugs and alcohol are my solution.
If this seems odd to you it is because you are not an alcoholic or a drug addict. You are likely one of the 90% of people who can drink and use drugs safely. I have friends who can smoke weed, swill gin, even do crack and then merrily get on with their lives. For me, this is not an option. I will relinquish all else to ride that buzz to oblivion. Even if it began as a timid glass of chardonnay on a ponce's yacht, it would end with me necking the bottle, swimming to shore and sprinting to Bethnal Green in search of a crack house. I look to drugs and booze to fill up a hole in me; unchecked, the call of the wild is too strong. I still survey streets for signs of the subterranean escapes that used to provide my sanctuary. I still eye the shuffling subclass of junkies and dealers, invisibly gliding between doorways through the gutters. I see that dereliction can survive in opulence; the abundantly wealthy with destitution in their stare.
Spurred by Amy's death, I've tried to salvage unwilling victims from the mayhem of the internal storm and I am always, always, just pulled inside myself. I have a friend so beautiful, so haunted by talent that you can barely look away from her, whose smile is such a treasure that I have often squandered my sanity for a moment in its glow. Her story is so galling that no one would condemn her for her dependency on illegal anesthesia, but now, even though her life is trying to turn around despite her, even though she has genuine opportunities for a new start, the gutter will not release its prey. The gutter is within. It is frustrating to watch. It is frustrating to love someone with this disease.
A friend of mine's brother cannot stop drinking. He gets a few months of sobriety and his inner beauty, with the obstacles of his horrible drunken behaviour pushed aside by the presence of a programme, begins to radiate. His family bask relieved, in the joy of their returned loved one, his life gathers momentum but then he somehow forgets the price of this freedom, returns to his old way of thinking, picks up a drink and Mr Hyde is back in the saddle. Once more his brother's face is gaunt and hopeless. His family blame themselves and wonder what they could have done differently, racking their minds for a perfect sentiment; wrapped up in the perfect sentence, a magic bullet to sear right through the toxic fortress that has incarcerated the person they love and restore them to sanity. The fact is, though, that they can't, the sufferer must, of course, be a willing participant in their own recovery. They must not pick up a drink or drug, one day at a time. Just don't pick up, that's all.
It is difficult to feel sympathy for these people. It is difficult to regard some bawdy drunk and see them as sick and powerless. It is difficult to suffer the selfishness of a drug addict who will lie to you and steal from you and forgive them and offer them help. Can there be any other disease that renders its victims so unappealing? Would Great Ormond Street be so attractive a cause if its beds were riddled with obnoxious little criminals that had "brought it on themselves"?
Peter Hitchens is a vocal adversary of mine on this matter. He sees this condition as a matter of choice and the culprits as criminals who should go to prison. I know how he feels. I bet I have to deal with a lot more drug addicts than he does, let's face it. I share my brain with one, and I can tell you firsthand, they are total fucking wankers. Where I differ from Peter is in my belief that if you regard alcoholics and drug addicts not as bad people but as sick people then we can help them to get better. By we, I mean other people who have the same problem but have found a way to live drug-and-alcohol-free lives. Guided by principles and traditions a programme has been founded that has worked miracles in millions of lives. Not just the alcoholics and addicts themselves but their families, their friends and of course society as a whole.
What we want to do with Give It Up is popularise a compassionate perception of drunks and addicts, and provide funding for places at treatment centres where they can get clean using these principles. Then, once they are drug-and-alcohol-free, to make sure they retain contact with the support that is available to keep them clean. I know that as you read this you either identify with it yourself or are reminded of someone who you love who cannot exercise control over substances. I want you to know that the help that was available to me, the help upon which my recovery still depends is available.
I wound down the hill in an alien land, Morrissey chanted lonely mantras, the pain quickly accumulated incalculably, and I began to weave the familiar tapestry that tells an old, old story. I think of places I could score. Off Santa Monica there's a homeless man who I know uses gear. I could find him, buy him a bag if he takes me to score.
I leave him on the corner, a couple of rocks, a couple of $20 bags pressed into my sweaty palm. I get home, I pull out the foil, neatly torn. I break the bottom off a Martell miniature. I have cigarettes, using makes me need fags. I make a pipe for the rocks with the bottle. I lay a strip of foil on the counter to chase the brown. I pause to reflect and regret that I don't know how to fix, only smoke, feeling inferior even in the manner of my using. I see the foil scorch. I hear the crackle from which crack gets it's name. I feel the plastic fog hit the back of my yawning throat. Eyes up. Back relaxing, the bottle drops and the greedy bliss eats my pain. There is no girl, there is no tomorrow, there is nothing but the bilious kiss of the greedy bliss.
Even as I spin this beautifully dreaded web, I am reaching for my phone. I call someone: not a doctor or a sage, not a mystic or a physician, just a bloke like me, another alcoholic, who I know knows how I feel. The phone rings and I half hope he'll just let it ring out. It's 4am in London. He's asleep, he can't hear the phone, he won't pick up. I indicate left, heading to Santa Monica. The ringing stops, then the dry mouthed nocturnal mumble: "Hello. You all right mate?"
He picks up.
And for another day, thank God, I don't have to.