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halle creative

  • work
  • sparknotes bio
  • (un)domesticated goddess-ish
  • let 'em talk

but is shar(un)g actually caring?

(un)domesticated goddess-ish is about the life of a 20 something single city girl gone *gulp* mountain step-mom.


I’m a horrible sharer. Blame it on Only Child Syndrome. Blame it on Mercury being in retrograde. Whatever the reason, if you stick your fork in my plate’s orbit and ask “Can I try a bite?” I will likely go full Hulk on you. I may not always explode out of my pants (reserved for special occasions), but I’ll grunt and mumble incoherently until you shake my medium rare slice of filet off your metal spear. Like, you ordered your own thing. You had your shot to order my thing and you didn’t.

I’ve pretty much always operated like this. I’ve had no reason to change! Friends and family either tolerated it or resorted to stealing bites and sips behind my back. But once I legally committed myself to another human for all eternity, I figured it was as good a time as any to rethink my capacity to share (or lack thereof).

My other half has taught me a lot in five years (like how to remove a fish hook out of my skin. You know, just in case.), but I’m particularly grateful for his patience while I learn to share things like blankets, headphones, face wash — and yes, even/especially food. I’ve even come so far as to be the first to ask if he wants a bite or sip before I dive in. My voice may quiver, and I may have already eaten some of his food, but I’m sincere about my offer. Mostly.

How noble of you, Sarah. That’s very mature of you, Sarah. You’re really adulting quite well, Sarah. Yeah, sure, things seem to be looking up, but I’m not gonna sit here and tell you my sharing issues are no more. Because as much progress as I’ve made with my husband, I’ve regressed to some of my Hulk-ish ways when it comes to sharing food with my step daughters.

Now before you swoop in and get all finger-waggy with me, let me first say: I love finger wagging. It’s so telegraphic. It’s often my first line of defense when someone tries to take the last croissant at Starbucks. So, I understand the urge to use it in this scenario. But I already know my food sharing behavior is neither very parental nor ladylike, so put your finger away and save that wag for another time.

That being said, why do I feel it necessary to deny these small humans some of my food or drink when they ask for it?

It’s not that I don’t WANT so share with them. It’s just, when I have (it was early in our relationship, I was still proving my coolness), I rarely saw my food or drink again. But you can’t blame my behavior. I’m assuming a parenting-type role after 28ish years of single child-dom, where I never had to protect my plate from sibling talons.

Oscar Wilde once said “with age comes wisdom.” I feel like I’m at a point where I can say: I get it, dude. And by “it” I  obviously mean I’ve developed some key strategies to avoid forking over more food or drink than necessary. How mature, I know.

Intrigued? Read on. Vaguely disappointed? You’ve already read this far, might as well keep going.

When we’re out to dinner, sometimes I’ll tell them there’s an ingredient in my dish I know they won’t like. Beets are a great one. They sound and look like an internal organ.

Other times (especially when anything sweet or sugary is involved) Ill eat when they’re showering/playing/sleeping. I’m also not above excusing myself to “take care of some lady business.” And by that I mean I’m not above eating a Reese’s in a corner of our bedroom where I’m out of range of those sugar-sniffing hounds.

Afterwards, sometimes I do think “Was that worth it, Sarah? Were those chocolate covered almonds really worth the sneakery?”

Honestly, yes. Those things are $11.99 a pound.

tags: Colorado, food, parenting, Snacking, adulting
Thursday 10.18.18
Posted by sarah halle
 

(un)domesticated AF

(un)domesticated goddess-ish is about the life of a 20 something single city girl gone *gulp* soon-to-be-wed mountain step-mom.


I should've started this page differently, but for the sake of page views, I won't. I should have made a clearer case as to why this page exists, but I'm an advocate of non-linear storytelling, so here we are. 

What does (Un)domesticated Goddess-ish really MEAN? You're an average literate so the actual WORDS aren't difficult to comprehend. But I'm talking about the deeper, VH1 Behind the Music type of meaning. 

Without revealing too much of my eye-patch #blessed childhood, I grew up laser focused on what I wanted to be when I grew up. I had a 15 year plan by the age of 17: become the Director of Communications for the Boston Bruins.

My career already juked down a few different paths by the age of 25, but I never daydreamed about my personal life. I didn't pine over the high school sweetheart all-inclusive package: the darling house with a white picket fence, two small humans running around, golden retriever et al. Instead, I plotted how long it'd take me to work at a fancy London agency and when I'd be asked back to become the Executive Creative Director of the free world...things like that.

But they say love happens when you least expect it. I want to slap whoever 'they' is silly because that's so damn prophetic. In three short years, that unexpected love thing happened to me. I became a 'we' instead of a 'me', I was making decisions with someone else about things like joint bank accounts and bed frames.

It felt like our 6 month cross-country move plan happened overnight and I was suddenly beamed down into a new life, complete with life insurance policies and laundry detergent high's. I don't know how to make quiche, my claim to fame is cereal, and I can clean a toilet about as well as you can potty train a cat. 

So to answer my self-posed question that you give two shits about, (Un)domesticated Goddess-ish is an exploration and acceptance of my unplanned personal life. Because guess what? It's OH-KAY that I never had a 'dream wedding' scrapbook or an Excel timeline mapping out the birth of my unborn twin children. 

It's more entertaining for all parties involved that I don't really know what I'm doing, anyway. 

tags: moving, New York, Colorado, undomesticated
Tuesday 03.21.17
Posted by sarah halle
 

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