Mother Talk Book Tour

Awhile back I was invited to participate in Mother Talk’s Blog Book Tour. Out of the titles I was given to choose from, one really stood out. I replied that I was interested, and a few days later I received this book in the mail: Healthy Mother, Healthy Child by Elizabeth Irvine. The author is a mother, nurse, and yoga instructor, and she uses her experience in these areas to explain her philosophies on healthy spiritual and physical living. I knew this book was going to be useful to me when I saw the front cover. Under the title is the phrase “Creating balance in everyday life.” And boy, do I need me some balance right now.

A quick update on my personal life: Ammon has moved out and filed for divorce again. We are getting ready to put the house up for sale so that I can move with the girls into something more manageable and affordable before Kindergarten starts in the fall. My emotions are in tatters, my shoulders are so scrunched up with stress and tension that I barely have a neck anymore, and my mental health seems to be teetering somewhere between barely hanging on and certifiably insane. Good lord, do I need balance.

The book is broken into four parts, but it was the first section on the body that really spoke to me. In this section she talks about the need to tune into your body’s intuitive healing processes through yoga, breathing techniques, and good nutrition. Since I’ve never tried yoga before, and I quite frankly suck at taking care of my physical self, I was a bit worried at first that I wouldn’t be able to connect with much of what she had to say, but she explained it all is such a simple and gentle way that within the first few pages I was down on the floor attempting my first Cobra Pose. What I appreciated the most about this book was that Elizabeth didn’t stop at teaching you how to try her ideas on your own- she takes it a step further, and guides you through the process of sharing it with your children.

The past few weeks have honestly been hell. Not just for me, for the girls too. Little Zibbit has been clingy and upset, and Babs is on high alert and tuned into the distressed emotional state of our family like only a five year old can be. This period of our lives is going to be so incredibly difficult for us all, and it’s going to take everything I’ve got in order to keep these frightening transitions from becoming traumatic. As a mother, I can only take my daughters so far along the path of physical and spiritual wellness. I can give them healthy food, a safe home, and a stable emotional environment, but deep down the way they weave these experiences into the tapestry of their lives is up to them alone. The best gift I can give them is the confidence that they can do what it takes to take care of their bodies and their spirits, because they are strong. I love the idea of sharing something as simple as yoga with them, breathing with them, showing them how to relax and center themselves. As much as I would like to, I can’t reach inside their bodies and stitch up the broken hearts this divorce will create. But I can give them the tools and skills they need to heal themselves, to grow and learn from the pain and hold onto that fiery strength that they were born with. This divorce is not going to break us. I’m going to make sure of that.

filed under Uncategorized, Mothering
May 9, 2007 at 2:44 am

6 Comments »

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  1. stay strong. you will get through this. remember you can always call me.

    Comment by Steven — May 9, 2007 @ May 9, 2007 at 10:29 am

  2. Karli, this is a beautiful piece of writing and I am touched by it. Your family is here to support you through this aweful time. I am sorry you all have to go through this. Love, mom

    Comment by Karli's Mom — May 9, 2007 @ May 9, 2007 at 3:58 pm

  3. Karli {{{{hug}}}}

    I am sorry for all of this. If you want to chat, you know where to find me. I keep my speakers loud so I can hear when someone messages me from most everywhere in the house. :)

    xoxoxo

    Comment by Georgia — May 9, 2007 @ May 9, 2007 at 7:10 pm

  4. I love you Karli, we are all here for you when you need us, and even when you don’t!! XOXOX

    Comment by Sara — May 10, 2007 @ May 10, 2007 at 10:15 am

  5. Words do not decribe how much I hope you come out the other side of this situation happier and stronger. Your devotion to your children and your ability to share such profound gifts with them speaks volumes. I only hope that you learn to love yourself as much as you love them; care for yourself as you care for them, in both a spiritual, nutritional, and physical sense. I wish you to embrace this yoga program. Pamper yourself, you deserve it.

    Take my cyber-hand, moonwalk with me, and together we can “trudge the path of happy destiny”.

    Comment by The Wiggler — May 12, 2007 @ May 12, 2007 at 10:49 pm

  6. Your writing is so calm, balanced and clear. You’re doing really bloody well for someone in this situation and your kids have a wonderful mother in you. You make me wish I lived next door so I could dish out tea and listening ears.

    Yoga’s done good things for my mind in the past. I hope it helps you. I’m going to buy that book: it looks ace.

    Buckets of love, A x

    Comment by Antonia — May 13, 2007 @ May 13, 2007 at 2:45 pm

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