Last week was a roller-coaster here in the rough neighborhood of my mind.

On the one hand, although I did everything I was supposed to do on weight watchers, I was still up a pound. It feels very unfair to be super-careful with my eating, and to successfully exercise 5 days/week, but to gain instead of losing. I *know* I’m in this for the long-haul, I’m making healthy choices, and that the gain may involve building some muscle.

Logic and knowledge have nothing to do with my feelings about this.

But I haven’t given up, although I did miss 2 mornings of exercise in a row. There has been no massive gorge on Halloween candy — I’ve had a couple of pieces, but nothing outrageous. And I’ve gotten up the last 2 mornings, exercised, and gotten homework done in the early morning.

On the encouraging side, I had a FABULOUS IDEA that has completely reinvigorated my PhD work. I’m not going to try to explain it here, but in a nutshell, it involves a feminist and queer theory analysis of copyright law.

I promise, that makes more sense and is less boring than you might think. It was one of those ideas that propels you forward instantly, where you find yourself WIDE AWAKE after bedtime, excitedly looking for articles and reading until the wee hours.

And on that note, back to statistics.

 

Spring is off to a very exciting start in our house, in no small part because Travel-Palooza 2011 began in April. I was in Boston during the first week of April, where I got to go to a very interesting conference on how journalists and libraries can work together to improve civic engagement, AND got to see my good friends Dave and Liz and Liz’s beautiful baby bump.

Between now and July, I am also going to Atlanta, Berkeley, New Orleans, and finally, to Istanbul, Turkey! Two of the trips are super-short, like 24-36 hours, but I will be in Istanbul for a full week.

The kids are not joining me for any of these, which at their age, I think is a good thing. However, Noah and I are going to go on an overnight camping trip together in June. Sadly, Jill isn’t going with me either. Maybe I’ll earn enough frequent flyer miles for us to take a trip together in 2012.

As much as I love my family and wish we could see some of these places and do some of these things together, I am soooooooooooo excited about all the travel! I miss going places and doing stuff out of my regular routine, and I really miss the experience of going somewhere completely new to me.

I think the last time I went somewhere I’d never been before, not even as a kid, was when I was pregnant with Josie and went to a conference on the big island in Hawaii. That was an awesome trip, where I got to go to the southernmost point in the United States. (Well, the cliff above that point. I didn’t do the climb down, what with being alone and 5 or 6 months pregnant at the time.)  I’d already been to the tip of the Cape of Good Hope, although I’m still missing Pulau Palawan, Gavdos, and of course, Cape Horn.

 

It’s that time of year. Where my thoughts turn to looking back over the last year, and begin to plan and imagine for next year. That season starts around my birthday, and runs through to NYE.

I declared 2010 “All About Love.”

In evaluating how well that went, I think I give myself a B.

On the positive side, I love how the kids are doing with school, and where they are, except that Noah has been seriously acting out lately. Which he is also doing at home and is a major negative.

Also positive, changing careers. I love the track I am on now. There have been a few course corrections since the semester began, but I feel great about the direction in which I’m heading for 2011 — embracing my new identity as a graduate student and future academic.

The house, I love. I think we all love it. And more importantly, we still love it months after moving in — in fact, I love it more. THAT has never happened before. Usually, the bloom fades after the first couple of months in a house.

And I think we have a lot of love as a family. We could use more patience, collectively, and more listening. I would rather not lose my temper quite so often. We totally dropped the ball on implementing a regular date night this year. But overall, there’s no question that we have a loving, supportive family.

Looking at 2011, the word that keeps coming to my mind is “discipline.” Not in the punishment sense, but in the “develop regular practices you do even when you don’t feel like it” sense. I made some good progress on that, particularly this semester, but I’d like to take it to the next level.

The other word that comes to mind is “fun.” As a family, we need to make sure there are outlets for that, too. That’s not to say we haven’t had fun this year, but as I dive more deeply into this PhD program, I suspect that structuring in a little fun is a good plan.

Actually, what came to mind was, “Discipline & Fun: Getting it done!” I’m afraid that sounds ridiculously hokey. But it seems to be what’s there for me.

Speaking of discipline and fun, the blog is what’s fun for me, and I’ve set my phone’s timer twice to tell me that I need to quit blogging and get to work on the paper that’s due next.

I’m trying on that 2011: Discipline & Fun: Getting it done! theme early.

I have a lot to be thankful for this year. Even more than usual.

This year, I am thankful that we are moved into and settling into our new house, which no longer includes two scary wild jungles in which one might easily lose a dog or toddler.

I am thankful for two wonderful, exhausting, intelligent, helpful, enthusiastic, energetic, adorable, sweet, stubborn, loud, creative loving children. (I wish I could share the two of them dancing to Michael Jackson’s Smooth Criminal with the entire planet. But I am not sure they would forgive me for it when they reached adolescence. Especially Noah.) I am thankful they have such nice manners (usually), that they love to read, and that they both enjoy counting, building, and learning new things.

I am thankful that they are beautifully cared for on weekdays, by a wonderful school community of caring adults who are helping them grow into those people I just described.

I am thankful for my wonderful wife, her love, her gracious move into the role of primary breadwinner, her support for my career change, her company for finally offering domestic partner health benefits, and her exhaustive music appreciation classes for Noah and Josie, and me too.

I am thankful for my parents, and for their support for our family, their help and enthusiasm with Noah & Josie, and for their love.

I am thankful for the freedom and privilege and opportunity I have to change careers at my age and stage of life. I’m thankful that UWM has a program that is such a perfect fit for my interests, and that I found it in time to apply. I’m thankful that the faculty have such a commitment to inclusion, and that the Institute for Museum and Library Services had the vision to reward that commitment with the Overcoming Barriers to Information Access fellowship that will let me both study and contribute to my family’s financial health over the next 3 years.

I am thankful for my 41 years on this planet. If I am able to stay on this trajectory, I think that the next 41 will be even more amazing.

Ever since Dan Savage announced the It Gets Better project, where older LGBT people tell younger, stressed out, considering-suicide LGBTQ teens and young people that they should try really hard to hang in there, because life gets better, I’ve wanted to contribute.

The thing is, I hate video of myself. And in my heart of hearts, I am technologically old: I like my computer to be quiet and have the images be still. So I didn’t.

Two things happened yesterday, November 2, 2010, that made me decide I have to contribute to It Gets Better, even if I don’t do video.

1) The elections. They were depressing, and probably a significant setback for the prospect of LGBTQ civil rights in the US. But not nearly as bad as the 2004 elections, when state anti-gay marriage ballot measures were all the rage. That year was WAY worse. See? It gets better. Ok, bad example.

2) I got offered an awesome fellowship for my graduate school program.

ASIDE for those of you who may not realize how Ph.D. programs work: Although most people have to find their own ways to pay for college and for professional degrees like law school or business school, most Ph.D. programs are different.

In a Ph.D. program, accepted students usually get offered some kind of part-time work doing research or as a teaching assistant. Most Ph.D. students do not take out student loans to pay for their degrees. The luckiest get something called a fellowship, which pays a similar amount of money, but doesn’t require the student to teach or work on someone else’s research.

Back to point #2. Yesterday, I was offered the opportunity to become one of those lucky ones. And it would not have happened if I were not out as a lesbian.

Really!

Here’s what happened: My doctoral program received a major grant, providing the opportunity to expand the diversity of both the program, and in the long run, our academic discipline. The terms of the grant proposal defined diversity very inclusively, specifically including (among many other perspectives) sexual orientation.

In the ordinary course of life, I’m out. But the way I look almost never sets off people’s “gaydar,” and sometimes LGBTQ issues just don’t come up. I don’t generally walk into a room and announce my sexual orientation. But I’m social and chatty, and my partner and I have been together for almost 8 years. We have 2 small children together. So my having a wife does come up pretty often. (Most frequently in the context of my answering the question, “So what does your husband do?” Answer: “Actually, my partner is a woman. She does blahblahblah.”)

When I started the program, I knew I was out to at least some of the faculty and my fellow students. I assumed that meant I was out to everyone, or at least close to everyone, but didn’t give the matter much thought.

A few weeks into the semester, during one of my classes, we had a conversation about the fact that doctoral students were needed to serve on various departmental committees. I volunteered for the Research Committee, commenting that I was concerned about being pigeonholed as “The Lesbian” if I sat on the Diversity Committee, so I wanted to serve elsewhere.

The next day, the professor approached me, tactfully inquiring as to whether or not he had correctly understood that I was an out lesbian, and thereby a member of an historically underrepresented group within the profession.

I agreed that I was, and assured him that I was generally out, and even slightly surprised that it had not come up previously, but of course, sometimes it doesn’t.

As we continued talking, he brought up the grant, and asked if it was something that would be of interest to me. The fellowship offers some fantastic opportunities within the program and the profession, and covers 3 years of study: of course I was interested!

I was formally interviewed a couple of weeks later, and yesterday, they offered me the fellowship.

So if you are a lonely, or depressed, or bullied, or fearful young person, and you are or wonder if you might be lesbian, or gay, or bisexual, or living in the wrong gendered body, or are otherwise feeling misfit and miserable, I promise you, it gets better.

In college, you will find people who like you and want to be around you because of who you are, not in spite of it. You’ll have an easier time avoiding the people you don’t like or want to see.

After college, there’s a good chance you’ll find someone who loves you because of who you are, and about whom you feel the same way. In my case, we also made the choice to have a big honking wedding, and to have children together.

Official Adoption Picture - Josie

You can do that, too, or you can choose to build a different kind of future.

And if you are really, really lucky, someone might even decide to reward you for being out.

P.S. I went to go upload this story to the It Gets Better web site, and found that Laura Bush did an It Gets Better video! Thank you, Mrs. Bush! My fellowship is funded by the Institute of Museum and Library Studies’ Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian program!

Most of you who know me in a day to day way have heard my big news already, but word is trickling out in a semi-random fashion to the rest of the world.

No, we’re not having another baby.

I’m starting a Ph.D. program this fall!

The University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee has a terrific School of Information Studies, and the school’s doctoral program offers a concentration in Information Policy. Those of you who know me professionally know that information policy is exactly what I am most interested in, especially as it relates to issues of privacy, security, and social media.

The prospect of teaching Information Policy means that eventually, hopefully, I will have a job where I think and write about the things I find most interesting, without the problem of needing to find clients to address their problems or confusion in this area.

In the shorter term, I’ll be working as a research assistant to Dr. Sandra Braman, analyzing how privacy was (and was not) designed into the architecture of the Internet, at least insofar as those choices were documented in the official design standards documents known as The RFCs. (The project looks at all law and public policy issues that arise in the standards process; my focus is privacy.)

We’ve been working on the first 10 years of the process so far, but there are thousands of additional documents as the RFC process continues to be the way that Internet design decisions are made. Rumor has it that I will also be working for other faculty, but I have yet to hear anything concrete; I’ve been working with Sandra since February.

My law practice will continue. It has never quite made it to the status of a full time job, although I have had the good fortune to work with some terrific clients, and I will continue to work on appropriate projects as they come up. But I will no longer be “beating the bushes” trying to turn it into a full-time practice.

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