death · Fear · health · illness · mindfulness

Does a Diagnosis Change Who I Am?

Two months after an emergency visit to the hospital for 3 days (which I wrote about here), I’ve finally been diagnosed. I have Addison’s Disease. So, not enough for me to have a name for what ails me. It has to declare itself a disease. That causes a lot of dis-ease for me. There’s a strand of thinking that says we are empowered once we are diagnosed. Along the lines: Knowledge is power. Now you know what you’re dealing with. And that classic marketing tag line: If it can’t be measured, it can’t be managed. With a diagnosis, I’m in measurable territory. There’s a map. I can manage.

I should be relieved.

Instead, I feel defeated. I’m not yet able to accept that the price of staying alive is medication for the rest of my life. Before, when my condition was nameless, I could imagine it being easily solved by the integrative medicine protocol that I undertook with great optimism. In fact, the calculated risk I took in going off of the prescribed conventional medications did not, at least in the short term, work out. I had imagined myself proudly declaring to my medical doctors that I’d been off the medication and wasn’t my healing capacity amazing. Instead, I ended up with blood work results that clearly indicated my body spiraling toward another emergency visit. I could feel the deterioration happening. The exhaustion coming back. Instead of my smug satisfaction with the medical doctors, I was contrite, owning up to my infidelity to their recommendations. As the endocrinologist said, I can’t impress on you enough how important it is that you take these medications seriously, if you want to stay alive.

I do. Want to stay alive.

Most days.

My energy rebounded quickly after getting back to the recommended protocol. And, I feel ridiculously fragile. Death accompanies me everywhere. Sure, I know in that mindfulness way that, I could die at any moment. Now this consciousness is not about mindfulness, it’s the knowledge that if I stop putting these little pills in my body three times a day, then my heart will quit. Some days, I hold the pill in my hand and toy with the idea of not taking it, of letting nature take its course.

I wonder if my vitality even counts anymore. My energy is so much a part of my identity. If it’s not real, am I a fake? Who am I?  

I understand that the fact that I have not been on medication before now is a massive privilege. I was not nearly as aware of that privilege as I am now. I understand that what I write here risks triggering people already on medication. You have every right to think, Get over yourself.

I had distanced myself from the possibility of disease. That won’t happen to me, I thought. I took credit for my health; thought I deserved it. After all, I exercise, eat veggies, sleep, meditate … you know, all the things we’re supposed to do. Right? Then my adrenal system stopped functioning. For no discernible reason. Except … these last 18 months have been stressful—my 28-year marriage dissolved; I lost my financial security, my home, my mother, my cat; and now, the cherry on top, this business with my health. I’ve written about the mountain of grief here and the psychological toll of my financial insecurity here.  I haven’t even gotten to the perilous state of the world. 

A loud inner critic attacks me: You failed to manage your stress. This disease is all your fault. More. You deserve this disease, because you have not had adequate empathy for others’ illness, because you were so cossetted in your healthy person privilege. You have brought this on yourself with your hubris, with every time you’ve answered a health questionnaire with the word robust to describe your health. The critic could go on at much greater length, but you get the picture.

A friend of mine, who was trying to be helpful, recently told me that I just needed to shift the narrative in my head. She tried to reassure me by saying that everything happens for a good reason, that there’s always a silver lining and that I need only put a different spin on the events unfolding. My inner critic was delighted to be so affirmed. See, she said, your fault. Oof. I get that my friend and my inner critic have good intentions. They fear that I’ve lost my belief in myself and they want me to pull up my socks. I want to pull up my socks. There’s nothing more annoying than a falling down sock that pesters the foot. Yet, sometimes I just want a caring human to sit down beside me while I take off my shoe and look at my sock and bemoan it’s falling down-ness, as if I were a character in a play written by Samuel Beckett.

At the same time, I actually do want to put one foot in front of the other and I know that will be easier with functional socks. So, even as I still crave the accompaniment and patience of another human, I’ve come up with a sock-friendly narrative I am working on adopting. New narratives don’t happen in a minute.

Here it is: Everything that’s happened in my life, just happened. Not for a good reason. Not with a silver lining. I am grateful to Thomas Moore, the author of Dark Nights of the Soul, for his clear-eyed book, in which he spoke with many people who had been through serious ordeals. Although they had all learned from their challenges, they did not say they wouldn’t have it any other way, or that they were grateful to their ordeal for having awoken them from their slumber. Instead, they said, in more eloquent words than the ones that follow, what happened sucked, I wouldn’t wish it on anyone, and, despite the bad hand I was dealt, I made the decision to grow from the experience and not to fold beneath its weight. The book gave me permission to feel all my grief and rage. Life will serve lemons. We have the right to gnash our teeth and wail or not get out of bed or whatever we need to do to honor and embody the ordeal. What doesn’t serve us is to resist the dark feelings that come with the dark nights. And, the and is key, we then have a choice about how we want to alchemize the lemons we’ve been served. We can bypass and add lots of sugar, hoping to hide the bitter. Or we can make bracing fresh lemonade that cleanses our system.

What is, is. I can either fight against what is, or I can work with it. Some years ago, I had the word compassion tattooed on my arm. It was supposed to remind me to have compassion for others and, crucially, for myself. This ordeal has brought me face to face with the compassion gap caused by the unconscious bias of my previous privilege. My inner critic screams into the gap, provoking an echo response from the canyon walls inside my head. The lemonade opportunity in all this is compassion. So simple. And so not. A super tall, skyscraper of an order.

I have the beginning of a to-do list for this new narrative: I need to begin with a hand outstretched to my critic. After all, compassion, like most things, starts at home. She is working hard to keep me upright and aware. I want, too, to create more ritual around taking my pills, to honor the fact that every time I take one, it’s a conscious choice to live. My friend Lori, who is a Reiki Master, suggested that I infuse my pills with the energy of Reiki and bring to them the intention of receiving their grace into my body as pure light and healing. I had a sudden flash of, Oh, that’s what my levels 1 & 2 Reiki certifications are for. More compassion put into practice.

The last thing that I’ve come up with so far, is to be compassionate with the critic and with all the other voices in my head who are having a hard time: The anxious part of myself, who trembles faced with all the unknowns in my life right now. The grieving part. The demotivated part. All of them.

Just as I long for someone to sit beside me and my falling down sock, I will sit beside my critic and my anxiety and my grief. After all, they are friends who need my support. Earlier in this piece, I wondered who I am and whether my diagnosis changed the answer. I’ve found my way here to several answers. First, I am the same person, with many different, sometimes conflicting and hopefully evolving characteristics. Another answer is aspirational, I want to be a person who sits beside others. And I’ll start with myself.

Now.   

Book Reviews · fitness

“Staying in the Game”: book review

Back in 2016, I did a two part interview with Pamela Meyer about returning to ski racing at mid life. Over the past eight years, she has gone from dipping her toe back into racing after more than two decades away from it to passionately competing in amateur races at an advanced level. She is a four-time NASTAR national gold medalist in her division, and also competes with the Wilmot Mountain Masters and Rocky Mountain Masters, where she won her first race in her age group last season.

As Meyer has trained, raced, triumphed, panicked, focused, been injured, recovered, lost and won, she has pondered what fully immersing into this kind of passion can teach us about other parts of our lives. Now, she’s drawn on her expertise as a leadership and agility thought leader to write “Staying in the Game — a guide for anyone who yearns to live with joy and purpose, in sports, in life and in work.

I met Pamela 21 years ago, when we were working on our PhDs together. I’ve always been awed and inspired by the way she dives into everything she does with playful intensity. She’s written before about the need for play at work (and in life), and established herself as a global speaker and innovator on agility at work. This new book integrates many of her earlier ideas into a deceptively simple guide to finding, seeking and fully engaging in the things that give you the most joy, meaning and impact in your life.

Staying in the Game is nominally pitched at the business and leadership audience that Meyer engages with most in her work, and some of the language might not immediately feel like it applies to an everyday desire to feel like we are living as fully as we want to. But for me — as a person approaching a milestone birthday, and who coaches people every day who are striving to feel like they are living in the way they are truly supposed to — this book offers a lot of practical guidance to explore what matters most to you most as individuals, how to develop the focus you need to get there, and how to keep learning and adapting.

The core concept of the book is about “Embodied, Agile Leadership” (EAL), which she defines as: Embodied — Attuned and engaged with your whole self; Agile — Able to quickly assess, learn and adapt to changing conditions; and Leadership — Able to effectively respond to both challenges and opportunities. The concepts do apply to leadership of all kinds — in business or in trying to change the world — but they equally make sense for anyone who is trying to set and achieve goals of any kind. Meyer tells her own ski racing story — and those of competitors in their 70s and 80s – throughout the book to illustrate the possibilities of true embodied awareness, self-reflection, and adjustment to what is true now and in the moment.

The book does not focus on aging, but draws light lines between the need for adaptation in any context and the inevitable adaptation we need to embrace as we age and our bodies change. And despite Meyer’s own incredible achievements in ski racing (and work), the book is not aimed just at high performance or elite level sport — it’s an accessible guide to exploring what gives you meaning (or happiness) and how to embrace it.

“Staying in the Game” is shaped into three sections — essentially, finding your own purpose or goal (your “game”), the dynamics of being in that space, and then “staying and playing for live and livelihood.” The book is part theory, part inspiration, part cheerleader and part self-help. Each chapter introduces a key concept, intertwined with storytelling from the worlds of business, ski racing and Meyer’s own embodied experience, and then concludes with some self-guided journaling and self-coaching prompts and exercises.

Meyer never implies that ‘anyone can do anything,” but overlays the book with a fundamental optimism about the potential of letting go of your own self-limiting beliefs and finding community and connections that enable and support you to try the things that scare you. One of her core messages — which applies to so many of the topics we engage with on this blog — is that we’re successful in sport, fitness, life challenges and work when we prepare fully, plan lightly, and adapt to what life offers us.

I will be recommending Staying in the Game to my coaching clients who are looking for an easy-to-follow framework that gets underneath motivation, fear and letting go. If you’re curious too, you can buy the book on the usual big retailers or better yet, order it from a small local bookstore, like Queen Books in my neighbourhood.

(And thanks to Pamela for putting her big heart and brain into the world).

Fieldpoppy is Cate Creede-Desmarais, who lives in Toronto, never skis and always looks for the deeper meaning.

fitness

September is the real “new year” – what does this mean for your routines?

Ahh, the mornings and evenings are cooler but there are still warm days ahead. Labour Day Weekend is practically in the rearview mirror. Young adults may be starting a new school year away from home for the first time and are thinking about a whole new program and where they may fit in some exercise. People are coming back to their regular routines after a summer of taking it a bit easier. Others have regular routines and they want to enhance them, keep it up, or maybe even tone it down a bit. Everyone has different goals, but September can be a good time to consider what they are.

September can feel more like a new year than January. Some of us celebrate the beginning of a new year on the Jewish calendar each September (and sometimes October) so that’s an added feeling of renewal.

Perhaps you have decided this is the time to start a new exercise routine? Why not add in another new regimen at the same time as everything else needs to line up in a row? You may choose not to do this. If so, go ahead and ignore the following advice and enjoy your cardamom-kissed tea and put your feet up. But some are getting out their day planners as I write this.

It may well be a great time to add in a regular habit along with the new drop offs, class schedules, calendars full of meetings. If you have a regular habit, what can you add in or swap for something else, to spice things up? What can you remove from your schedule that’s not serving your goals anymore? Doing these things can help support your mental and physical well being when life is busy.

What are things you can consider while you are making plans for the “new year” ahead?:

  • Write down your plans;
  • Review those plans and then really think what is realistic and what is not – take out what is not;
  • If you know you are not going to have an hour in your day but can fit in a few sessions of 20 minutes, spaced out throughout the day, plan for that adjustment. Don’t try to schedule an hour every day, if that is going to be impossible.
  • Consider what fitness means to you and what works for you. Is there a hobby you used to enjoy that you’ve been meaning to start up again (roller derby, hoola hooping, orienteering). Do you LIKE exercise classes? If yes, do you prefer virtual, in-person, small group, larger gym? Is nature your gymnasium and you’d rather focus your energy on a trail or on the sidewalk?;
  • Put those new plans in your calendar. Whether it’s booking exercise classes or time for a hike and setting aside that time in an app or your Google calendar or an old fashioned wall calendar, make those plans part of your schedule;
  • With respect to the plans in your calendar, be flexible, but also respect those plans. Your friend wants to meet for lunch on Saturday, but you have an exercise class planned for 9 am? Make it a later lunch so you don’t feel too rushed and more likely to opt out of the class. Or suggest another day for the lunch until that 9 am class becomes an ingrained part of your day. Don’t feel guilty about it. Looking after yourself is just as important as socializing;
  • If you are starting a new fitness plan, make sure you are nourishing yourself properly. Don’t worry about what you shouldn’t eat. Actually, don’t worry. Just try to get a lot of fruits and vegetables and enough protein and carbs that you feel satiated. Try to stay hydrated (and also don’t worry if you don’t get 8 glasses of water a day – just drink water or other beverages that make you feel hydrated throughout the day;
  • Cut yourself some slack. If you miss a day’s fitness plans, put it out of your mind and try to keep the next day’s plan. Don’t dwell on what you missed;
  • Don’t create unrealistic goals. Don’t look for “results”. Trust me on this. Just take “results” out of your head and focus on making exercise a habit. If someone starts providing unsolicited advice about results and how you can go after them, tell them that is not your focus and bye.
  • Find a fitness buddy. Whether that person actually works out with you or they are there to encourage you to get to your fitness plans, by text or on the phone, find someone who respects your new plan and is there to encourage (not push) you;
  • Try to get enough sleep. It’s always important to get enough regular sleep, but especially when you are adding a new fitness routine, don’t cut yourself short on your sleep;
  • Be flexible – you decided to try a particular class and after a couple weeks, you just aren’t feeling it, try another class or another option for that time. There isn’t one way to reach your goals, give a few different things a chance before you find something that you enjoy and that sticks;
  • Plan rest days. At least one day a week, plan it as a rest day. No matter how excited you may feel at the new found energy, enthusiasm and incentive to fit that new fitness regimen in every day, make sure you plan a rest day. They are just as important as the active days for your overall well-being; and
  • Think about safety. What gear do you need to keep yourself safe? If you are starting a new walking or running program outside, for example, do you need reflectors? Do you need to remind yourself to look both ways if you are running in an urban area? This may seem trite but safety is important and don’t forget it.

If you embark on a new fitness plan, there may be varying results. You may find a plan that works for you and for which you are fairly consistent with for years to come. You may embark on a new fitness plan and life throws wrenches in your plans and you need to adjust, re-start, re-plan, re-assess. That is OK! Part of the fun, is finding what works for you, and in the process, finding those days, whether regular or interspersed, that pepper your life with feelings of strength, stress relief, a clear mind, renewed incentive, or reminders of what works for you and what doesn’t, and therefore, a better understanding of yourself.

Good luck planning your fitness plans for the “real New Year” in September!

Dear Readers, do you have any tips for anyone starting a new fitness plan this fall?

Nicole lives in TO and has a regular fitness routine of running, HIIT/strength classes, walking a lot and a bit of yoga and other things.
fitness

It’s my birthday, my left knee’s birthday, the blog’s birthday, and the end of summer

Goodbye August

I just turned 59, while it isn’t yet 60, it does mark the beginning of my last year of my 50s. And I had a friend die this week. (See more here.) So thoughts of mortality loom large. My birthday also marks the end of summer. So, I am struggling a bit.

You can get a sense of the flavour of my usual fall sadness by reading this piece The Summer That Never Was. It beautifully connects end of summer melancholy with thoughts of mortality. But this year, it’s more anchored in the sadness of losing a friend and an important feminist philosopher.

Sadness acknowledged, it’s been a good birthday week. I very much appreciated Catherine’s 59 things tribute. It made me laugh and smile during a week where that’s not been easy. A friend posted on Facebook acknowledging the hard week but adding “I hope you have a good day nonetheless. We need to treasure the time we have, as well as each other.” That’s true. Thanks CH!

For the first time in my life, one of my kids took on the task of organizing my birthday. We went axe throwing. My 80-year-old mother teamed up with Jeff, I teamed up with Sarah, and Gavin teamed up with his partner Cali. So we had one over-60 team, one middling team, and one under-30 team. Surprise! The oldsters won!

My mother is having a bit of a wild week. She also went hot tubbing (a first!) and came for a drive on the ATV at the farm (another first!). Now axe throwing. Who knows what’s next? Seeing her in action certainly helped with any age related angst in my life. Go Kathleen!

Other good birthday things–we all had appetizers and cake at Gavin and Cali’s Hamilton pad. And I got some great gifts. There were new cycling shoes and Emma Donoghue’s new book.

Learned by Heart

I was also given a very fluffy and soft, long black coat, with some bedazzling. Thanks Gav and Cali. Photo to follow!

It’s also the blog’s birthday this week. Happy 11th birthday Fit is a Feminist Issue! And it’s the birthday of my left knee. Happy 1st birthday new left knee!

It’s no surprise, of course, that the blog and I have our birthdays so close together. I started the blog with Tracy as part of our fittest by fifty challenge, two years in advance of our 50th birthday. You can read the whole story here.

Sarah and I are away camping this weekend, marking summer’s end and the start of the university year. Ready set go! (But first some time at the beach, maybe time in the canoe, and definitely some cards around the campfire.)

Camping at Sauble Falls
fitness · traveling

Catherine becomes a tourist and boy are her feet tired

This weekend I’m in San Francisco with my sister, touristing around, seeing sights, and eating very yummy food. Our plans Saturday included taking public transportation, traditional cable cars included, to see much of the city before renting a car and heading out to nature.

We ended up on foot for much of the day; the cable car service was interrupted and crowds made accessing public transport less efficient than walking.

So we walked. And walked. Up hills. And down hills. And walked some more.

What I really wanted to do after all that up and down walking was this.

However, given that we are lucky humans staying at a hotel, we are doing the next best thing: swimming in this lovely hotel pool.

A lovely hotel pool. We are checking it out Sunday.

We are planning other forms of transport for the rest of our trip: ferries, bikes, buses, and yes, that so-far elusive cable car. And yes, more walking.

It’s been a while since I’ve pounded the pavement in a city I was visiting. My feet and temper aren’t used to it. Luckily, my sister has lots of experience dealing with whiny family members (she has three children), and we end up joking and laughing about something or nothing.

I’m looking forward to lots more exploration with my sister, and plan to do a lot of mileage under the power of my own two feet. However, scheduling in some lolling seems like a good plan too. I’ll report back on both next week.

self care

Give Self Care September a Try!

Yes, I know that September is really full of ‘get back into the swing of things’ pressure but that’s all the more reason to give Action for Happiness‘ Self Care September suggestions a try.

After all, finding new ways to create more space for yourself in your own life is a great way to decide just how many other things you want to fit in around that space.

This calendar has a lot of ideas but remember that you don’t have to do EVERYTHING. You can just pick SOME things.

Pick a few that appeal to you and run with those.

Please be kind to yourself about this (and about everything else.)

a calendar of self-care tips
Image description: a calendar of self-care tips from Action for Happiness. The blocks are blue, red or pink and the text in each one is white, blue or red. Cartoon images illustrating the tips are scattered around the edges of the calendar.
A video entitled ‘Self Care 3: 3 top tips with Vanessa King’ from the Action for Happiness YouTube channel. Still image is of a smiling person looking toward the viewer, with various flowers in vases in the background. The title is in red and yellow text on the right side of the screen.

If you are interested in developing more self-care practices, I really enjoyed Dr. Pooja Lakshmin‘s book ‘Real Self Care: A Transformative Program for Redefining Wellness (Crystals, Cleanses, and Bubble Baths Not Included)’ because she gets into the deeper issues surrounding taking good care of ourselves. There’s a good written summary of many of Lakshmin’s key points here from a podcast called Inspired Together Teachers. (By the way, I haven’t listened to the podcast yet, I just read the summary.)

challenge · fitness · yoga

A 30-day yoga challenge Tracy can get behind — any other takers?

Image description: grid with 30 days of yoga poses, one per square, cartoon-like drawings of a person doing each pose on a yoga mat. Each square includes the name of the pose (e.g. Pigeon Pose) at the bottom and the challenge day (e.g. Day 28) at the top.

I like 30-day challenges. I like easy and attainable challenges. And I love yoga. So when Sam brought this very attainable 30-day yoga challenge from Livestrong to the attention of the Fit Is a Feminist Issue blog regulars, I said, “Yes please!” I need to kickstart my Fall. Most people’s activity routines get solid through the summer. Mine faltered. Nothing like the first day of September and a very easy daily goal to ease back into it.

The gist of it is this: they suggest one pose a day (as per the above poster) for each day of the challenge. The commitment is to hold the pose twice a day for 30-60 seconds. If your body isn’t keen on the suggested pose, pick a different one. That’s it. I can do that.

And I bet you can too. Who wants to join me?

family · fitness · Guest Post · swimming

All Lanes are Open (Guest Post)

Would you rather be able to fly or be able to breathe under water? My seven-year-old daughter has been entertaining our family the past few suppers with “Would you rather” questions. This one, between flying or breathing under water, comes at a time when my choice is clear. However, if she had asked it two days ago, that clarity may not have been there.

Two days ago, I found myself spiraling towards depression. The current economic climate paired with my four-year-old son’s exercises in emotional regulation had been agitating my anxious mind. The stress had begun to cling to my arms, threatening to squeeze me into suffocation. By the time I sat down at the supper table, I was detached from conversation and desperate for solitude, a state of being that is contrary to my extroverted nature. I felt on the verge of a mental breakdown when, suddenly, I was hit with an undeniable desire: I wanted to go lane swimming.

Swimming is my preferred fitness activity, though, admittedly, I don’t often engage in it. My fitness journey has been one of ideas more than one of action. When I am thinking about fitness it is in the context of “When I have some free time, I’ll get to it.” The problem is that I am the mom of two busy kids, a responsible pet owner to an active dog, a socialite who desires to stay connected, and an aspiring entrepreneur about to jump into a new career—free time evades me. These identities of mine are used as my primary excuses for scarcely devoting time to exercise.

However, that evening at the supper table, I chose to listen to my desire, and I declared to my husband that I was going lane swimming. We had already made plans for him to complete the children’s bedtime routine while I got some work done, but I told him that I needed to go swimming instead. Being the knowledgeable and supportive husband that he is, he heard my desperation and encouraged me to go.

Yet, even after mentally committing to going, I found myself putzing about, slowly gathering my aquatic attire, waiting for the excuses or distractions to come. A small voice trickled in bringing guilt over leaving the family and household responsibilities to my husband. Isn’t that often the case, that women feel guilty about taking time to take care of themselves? I am thankful that my husband doesn’t support that mindset. Seeing my hesitation, he told me again to go. No other excuses came.

So I went. I drove the one kilometer to the pool, navigated the newly renovated changeroom, and walked awkwardly towards the lanes. Feeling out of place and slightly embarrassed by my existence, I paused to confirm with the lifeguard that all lanes were open. They were. Then, after more than five years, I snapped on my goggles and dove in.

What a glorious experience! The salty basin welcomed me freely, extending the kindness of washing the tensions and stresses from my body. Giving way to my strokes, the water let me rise and fall with the movements of my limbs. My muscles propelled me forward in a pattern understood by my lungs, which held air for me until my mouth broke the surface. I swam two lengths, rested for a minute, and then repeated, cycling between the front crawl, breaststroke, and backstroke.

For 30 minutes I resisted the urge to push myself in favour of allowing myself to enjoy my time in the water. That proved to be difficult as two swimmers in the lane next to me had performed their butterfly strokes at twice the speed of my breaststroke. To tame my competitiveness, I allowed myself to admire the strength of these women. Though their skills surpassed mine, I knew that it was a result of ambition, perseverance, and conditioning.

These women were working hard, and I knew that they had reached their level of athleticism by choosing to engage in that hard work regularly. I felt inspired by these women by their mere existence in the pool, so I chose to allow myself to think of myself in that light too. I left the pool with a confidence and a knowledge about myself that I had silenced. I learned that in the water I am powerful, graceful, capable. In the water I feel hopeful, patient, and at peace.

Two days later, these feelings linger. The minute tension that remains in my glutes and hamstrings brings me pride. It took more effort to get myself to the pool than the act of swimming did. The only barricade between a lifestyle that heals my anxieties and nourishes my body is me.

My priorities, while focused on good things—like my children, pets, and wanting to contribute to the household in duties and in finances—have needed this awakening to consider the exponential benefits of physical activity.

My fitness journey is alive. When I am not physically moving, I am growing. My life leads me to places that challenge my priorities, my patience, and my fears. Fitness has a place in that growth, and I see it attract me back to it in my most desperate states of being. This time, I am certain that I won’t be waiting five years before visiting the lanes again. In fact, I find myself thinking that next time I’ll ride my bike the one kilometer to the pool.

I couldn’t have imagined that one lane session would be so transformative. So, when I am asked if I would rather be able to fly or breathe under water, my answer is quick and easy: I would rather breathe under water. It takes me to new heights anyway.

Stephanie Morris is a transcriptionist and writer based in Alberta, Canada. She is a wife, a mom of two, and a newcomer to the career-writing world. As a fancier of history and literature, she aspires to blend the two in fiction and nonfiction pieces. To follow Stephanie’s writing adventures, find her at @words.and.smores on Instagram.