This Ain’t My Mama’s Broken Heart


Have you ever heard an old(er) song & realized you had totally forgotten about it? And furthermore that the song was far more profound than you had previously realized? That happened to me recently with a Miranda Lambert song- Mama’s Broken Heart to be specific. On the surface the song is about a breakup & how the singer isn’t handling it “like a lady.” In other words, she’s actually feeling & showing her emotions instead of just suppressing everything to “save face.” The song was released some 13 years ago (in 2011) & at the time I liked it well enough but never gave it a lot of thought. It didn’t feel like something I could relate to at that point in my life. After all, that was the year I got married- I wasn’t thinking about a breakup!

Well, here I am 13 years later, still happily married, yet the song is suddenly very relatable to me. That may sound counterintuitive but let me explain. The song was written by Kacey Musgraves (along with Brandy Clark & Shane McAnally) who is a fantastic singer/songwriter & has written some of the most incisive country songs of the past 15 years, so really it comes as no surprise that the song is far deeper than I realized on its initial release. You see, it isn’t JUST about a breakup. It uses a breakup as a way to critique a greater societal issue, something that is particularly relevant for women raised in small towns. And what is that issue? It’s exactly what I referenced earlier- actually expressing emotions instead of just suppressing everything in order to save face & remain “lady like.” And beyond that, I see the song as a critique of people who are more concerned with appearances & the opinions of others than with their own emotional wellbeing or that of their own family. Check out the lyrics below (& the song itself: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7yg05svXp98&ab_channel=mirandalambertVEVO)

I cut my bangs with some rusty kitchen scissors
I screamed his name ’til the neighbors called the cops
I numbed the pain at the expense of my liver
Don’t know what I did next, all I know, I couldn’t stop

Word got around to the barflies & the Baptists (I love how this points out that churchgoers can be every bit as gossipy as the “sinners” at the bar)
My mama’s phone started ringin’ off the hook
I can hear her now sayin’ she ain’t gonna have it
Don’t matter how you feel, it only matters how you look

Go & fix your makeup, girl, it’s just a breakup
Run & hide your crazy & start actin’ like a lady
‘Cause I raised you better, gotta keep it together
Even when you fall apart
But this ain’t my mama’s broken heart

I wish I could be just a little less dramatic
Like a Kennedy when Camelot went down in flames
Leave it to me to be holdin’ the matches
When the fire trucks show up & there’s nobody else to blame

Can’t get revenge & keep a spotless reputation
Sometimes revenge is a choice you gotta make
My mama came from a softer generation
Where you get a grip & bite your lip just to save a little face

Go & fix your makeup girl it’s just a break-up
Run & hide your crazy & start actin’ like a lady
‘Cause I raised you better, gotta keep it together
Even when you fall apart
But this ain’t my mama’s broken heart

Powder your nose, paint your toes
Line your lips & keep ’em closed
Cross your legs, dot your I’s
And never let ’em see you cry

Go & fix your makeup, well, it’s just a break-up
Run & hide your crazy & start actin’ like a lady
‘Cause I raised you better, gotta keep it together
Even when you fall apart
But this ain’t my mamma’s broken heart

I suppose the whole song could be summed up in that one line- “Don’t matter how you feel, it only matters how you look.” Now, just to be clear, this post is NOT a castigation of my own mother or any specific person. Rather it’s an attempt to sort out my own feelings about a society that often leaves me baffled & exhausted.

You see, I was raised in a society where appearances were of utmost importance. Tattoos & piercings were frowned upon, even considered downright sinful. Men wore suits & ties to church & women only wore skirts & dresses. Those who dared to wear pants were considered “wild.” One of the formative moments in my life is when the pastor at my family’s church saw fit to include in his sermon a critique of a men’s athletic team who met the US president (it was probably George W. Bush) & committed the grave error of not dressing suitably. Apparently some of them wore sandals or something less than a suit & tie, & thus they were deemed disrespectful. Even at the time (as a teenager) I remember thinking “But the president is just a MAN. Who cares? Isn’t respect better shown through your words & actions than your CLOTHES?” I’ve never forgotten that.

As a child I also remember hearing a story about a distant relative, long since deceased, who refused to open the door to a man who came to her house because he had a beard. He was someone who knew her or her family, not a total stranger. But because he had a beard, he was deemed disrespectful & thus unworthy of entrance to the house. Now my family who told this story agreed this was preposterous but stopped short of calling out the elderly woman for being incredibly rude. (Or maybe they did & I’ve just forgotten that part.)

These are just two examples of things I heard in my formative years that emphasized that appearance was of utmost importance. Yet at the same time I was constantly told that what was on the “inside,” in our hearts, mattered most. It was a message that was confusing at best, maddening at worst.

On a far more serious note, for so much of human history women have been asked- or more often demanded- to silence their own feelings in order to “save face,” as the song puts it. This has meant everything from marrying someone against their will to staying silent about abuse (because God forbid we should ruin some “important” man’s reputation!) to anything & everything in between.

Now the question you may be asking is- why is all of this relevant now? I’ve already told you I’m still happily married, so no, I’m not experiencing a breakup for which I seek to take revenge. At least not a romantic breakup. You see, my latest blog post, which was written & published shortly after Trump was re-elected as US president, was my official breakup announcement with conservative America. As I explained in that post, this really isn’t a new thing- it’s been happening very gradually for my entire adult life. I’ve just finally gotten the guts to be more open about it. As a recovering people pleaser, it’s taken me a very long time to be willing to take on the derision I know may come from being more open about my views.

So, no, I’m not experiencing romantic heartbreak. But I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t disappointed in our society right now. Now I’m not saying I’d be happier if Harris had won the election. But I at least thought it was going to be close, not the overwhelming victory it was for Trump. I know I shouldn’t take it personally that many folks I love voted for Trump- in some ways I understand why. But I do take it a bit personally because the man is a sleazeball- & that’s putting it nicely! I’m the one who’s going to have to explain to my daughter some time in the next few years that yes, here we are in the 21st century, still electing an old man who is likely a rapist. Or at best has incredibly sexist views on women. Not to mention the person Trump has announced as his AG appointee is a man whose career has been marred by allegations of sexual abuse, including against underage women. Now I realize allegations don’t always equate to facts but this is certainly suspicious, to say the least. This is not a conversation I look forward to having with my daughter.

On the other hand, I’m also disappointed to see how closed-minded some liberals have been about this situation. As easy as it would be for me to say, like many of them have, “Anyone who voted for Trump is a horrible person,” I know that life just doesn’t work that way. As I said in my last post, I know & love people who voted for Trump as well as for Harris & for 3rd party candidates. All of them are lovely people who work hard, take care of their families, & are good citizens in their communities. I refuse to give into this narrative that your voting record reflects everything about you as a person.

Having said that, I’m still disappointed. Maybe our political candidates have always been this terrible & it’s just that the internet & social media have made us much more aware of all of their many faults. Regardless, I just can’t help but ask myself what it says about our country that a bully like Trump has somehow managed to secure the Republican party nomination not once, not twice, but three times & has now been elected president twice. It can’t be anything good, that’s for sure!

So yes, I am a little broken-hearted right now. It’s really not even about the election so much as it’s just about humanity as a whole. I’m just sickened by how heartless so many people can be. No matter what my opinions may be about anything, I just want to be a kind person to everyone. I want to soothe the souls of those who are hurting & bring hope to those who are in need of it. And right now, I am one of those souls- this post is nothing if not an attempt to ameliorate the hurt in my own heart. I for one am NOT going to be quiet about my disappointment & sadness & care only about how I look or how others perceive me. And if you don’t understand why I’m disappointed, you can call me crazy all you want. After all, this ain’t my mama’s broken heart- it’s mine.

Dear Conservative America, I’m Breaking Up With You


Dear Conservative America,

I’m breaking up with you. Actually, the truth is I broke up with you a long time ago- I’m just finally making it official. But, you see, this wasn’t an instantaneous process. I guess you could say it wasn’t a “clean break.” It was a very gradual moving away. Sometimes it was one step away, two steps back, one step away, two steps back, & so on, until eventually I realized- I don’t identify with you anymore.

I grew up absolutely immersed in you, such that conservative America was really all I knew. But even as a senior in high school I was starting to see cracks in your foundation. I wrote a poem about disillusionment that year & it was all about you & how I was beginning to realize you weren’t all I thought you were. I was beginning to see that I wasn’t allowed to ask questions, especially as a lowly female, that only certain people were really deemed worthy of your “compassion,” that change was always viewed as a bad thing. Even at 18, I couldn’t tolerate that, but I also wasn’t sure how to identify myself outside of you.

You see, when you’ve been immersed in something since birth, walking away is not an easy thing. My friends & acquaintances that didn’t grow up in conservative, rural America don’t understand why it’s taken me so long to formally denounce you. Many of them think I’m still not liberal enough- & probably will never be. But they don’t know what it’s like to have drunk the juice & figured out it was poison. They don’t know what it’s like to be viewed as heathen or a “stupid snowflake” by almost everyone you grew up with, especially when you still see some of those people.

I guess you may be wondering what the final straw was. Why now? Why am I finally ready to announce my break up with you? In short, the answer is Trump & all the nasty behavior his presidency has inspired. In 2016, I was well & truly disappointed at how quickly so many of my conservative friends & family embraced him. Some were more enthusiastic than others of course. Again & again I said to myself “Now if his party name started with a D, y’all would be tearing him to shreds for all of his many obvious sins.” Eight years later, it’s only gotten worse. No matter how many horrible things Trump says & does, that are so far removed from the Jesus y’all supposedly worship, the support for him only grows stronger. Now unlike most liberals (I guess I’m a moderate, not a true liberal anyway), I still have compassion on y’all. I realize that most folks are voting with their wallets, & while I may not think that Trump is going to be a magic pill that makes the world more affordable for everyone, I can understand why a lot of people see it that way. And as someone who is not living paycheck to paycheck, I’m in no position to judge the choices of those who are.

Having said that, I just can’t keep quiet anymore. I’ve waited too long as it is. I’ve been too afraid of rejection, too afraid of being the proverbial black sheep anymore than I probably already am. But I’ve also had to live with the guilt of being quiet & it’s simply too much to bear. Some will say I was never a true conservative or I wouldn’t have left, I wouldn’t have changed my mind. But that’s not true. I was 100% a dyed in the wool member of conservative America. I was that insufferable teenager who actually read her Bible before school every single morning. Who memorized more scripture than most churchgoers will ever dream of. I’ve read the Bible from cover to cover more times than most people who swear they believe every word of it. (Ok, I may have skipped a few bits of 1st & 2nd Chronicles where it’s mostly just long genealogies, but I promise I have read the vast, vast majority of every single book from Genesis to Revelation, even the very obscure rarely quoted/studied parts.)

The thing is, in reading all of that I realized the people who said they believed every word of it were picking & choosing which parts to believe just as much as anyone who didn’t believe it. Or openly admitted they chose to believe only certain parts. Y’all might say I wasn’t paying attention but I was. And the Religious Right I saw then wasn’t matching up with the Jesus I read about. And that’s become even more true now that that y’all, the Religious Right, have embraced Trump.

So go ahead, say what you want. Tell me I’m a heathen, a sinner, & what’s wrong with America (or the world) today. But as someone who advocates strongly for her patients as a nurse, who donates blood multiples times every year (& has for my entire adult life, except while pregnant & breastfeeding), who donates to charities on a very regular basis, who recycles & composts everything I can, who has examined her own biases & prejudices & opened my heart to people who are very different than I am- respectfully, no, I am not what is wrong with America. I’m just a woman calling out a toxic relationship when I see one.

You see, recently I came across a song called The Straw by Kassi Ashton. I immediately fell in love with the heartbreaking lyrics but initially I felt like I couldn’t relate to them because I am, after all, married to the very first guy I ever dated. So I haven’t suffered the kind of romantic heartbreak that inspired the song. But the more I listened to the lyrics, the more I realized I DO know that kind of heartbreak. I was a true believer in conservative America. So I do know the heartbreak of leaving something you loved but came to realize was toxic. I do know how incredibly hard that is- & yet also how incredibly freeing it is!

At the end of the day I’ll always have a soft spot in my heart for you, conservative, rural America (you are one & the same, of course). Y’all are my people, after all. I can’t turn my back on you. No one else is going to advocate for you. BUT that doesn’t mean I have to condone everything about the culture. It doesn’t mean I get a free pass to turn a blind eye to the problems there.

I’ll end this letter with the song that inspired it. Usually I like to speak for myself but in this case I think Kassi said it better than I could have, perhaps because I am too emotionally invested in this. I’ll also end by saying that I know & love people who voted for Trump, Harris, & third party candidates (I voted for a 3rd party myself, as I have for most every presidential election). I’m not ending relationships over this because I realize many people didn’t feel good about their choice anyway. Plus, if I write people off over this one choice, I’m not providing them with an opportunity to change. After all, I was once on the other side of the fence myself.

Here’s a link to the song. Her voice is phenomenal. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a4xrAeWGV0o&ab_channel=KassiAshtonVEVO

Lastly, I’ll quote what Kassi said about her hometown: “I love being from there… but I love just as much that I learned how to leave.” (https://www.youtube.com/shorts/sVdtanvUcNc)

“Could’ve been the way you stood there
Acting like I needed you to save the day
I don’t need to be saved
Could’ve been you cornered my emotions
Up against the wall when I needed space
You know I needed space (I did, that’s one reason I left)
I would’ve traded all the things you gave me
I didn’t need
I thought I was a stayer
But God, you made a runner out of me (You did- you see I left- even though that wasn’t something I necessarily dreamed of or planned)

My shoulders would hold ya
And the gravity of the blame (Yes, I’ll take the blame, I’ll be the “crazy” one)
Heart broke, no joke
Do we really have to give it a name?
My back aches, my bones break
I was the only one willing to change (Yes, I was the only one willing to change, & I know I’m called wrong for doing so)
Who cares what made it heavy anyway?
The straw

Was it that I spelled it out in black & white
But you could never hear me?
You can only hear yourself (Echo chambers, anyone?)
I know you think I just gave up
But I didn’t give up
I was so damn patient
I tried, I cried (Yes, I have cried, more than you know)
But like a dam to a flood
I could only take so much

My shoulders would hold ya
And the gravity of the blame
Heart broke, no joke
Do we really have to give it a name?
My back aches, my bones break
I was the only one willing to change
Who cares what made it heavy anyway?

The straw
That broke the back of the girl
That loved ya
The straw that broke the back of the girl
That loved ya
The straw that broke the back of the girl
That loved ya
The last damn straw that broke the back
Of the girl that loved ya
Ah

My shoulders would hold ya
And the gravity of the blame
Heart broke, no joke
Do we really have to give it a name?
My back aches, my bones break
I was the only one willing to change
Who cares what made it heavy anyway?
The straw

The straw
Ooh, ooh-ooh, ooh
The straw that broke the back of the girl
That loved ya
The last damn straw that broke the back
Of the girl that loved ya
Damn”

The Outsider


This is not a political blog & it never will be. But I HAVE made it clear that I am a Libertarian & I make no apologies for that. Today’s post is just a quick vent (before Rachel wakes up, if I can manage that). I am writing this purely for my own emotional benefit (e.g. stress relief), not because I need some kind of third party validation for my feelings.

libertarian

Being a Libertarian is hard. Everywhere I go I’m always the outsider, the objector. If I’m with my family or my more conservative friends, I’m too liberal because I support gay marriage & the legalization of drugs & prostitution (not because I think drugs or prostitution are good ideas- obviously they’re not- but because I see no benefit to society to criminalizing them), plus I love rock/heavy metal. If I’m at work or with my more liberal friends, I’m too conservative because I’m not a hardcore feminist, I support lower taxes/small government, I hate socialism, & I support the second amendment. Basically I am always the crazy person. Ha!

libertarian cartoon

To be clear, I am not complaining about my friends or family. They are all wonderful people who are accepting of me even though I’m very different in some ways. I’m just saying that there are days when I must admit I am jealous of those who have the luxury of truly fitting into a community of like-minded people. It must be nice to live in a world where you can be constantly reassured that your beliefs are the right ones, whether they are more liberal or more conservative beliefs. (Or maybe no one actually feels that way & I’m imagining it.) Meanwhile everywhere I go I feel like I’m constantly being told “you’re wrong, you’re wrong, you’re wrong!”

libertarian graphic

But at the end of the day I’m a Libertarian for a reason: I love liberty. I love freedom. I truly believe in individual freedom & self-responsibility. And I truly believe that individuals are better when they are freer & thus our communities are better as well. After all, what our communities made of if not individuals? And if that makes me permanently a bit of an outsider, so be it.

piss off cartoon

This cartoon is my life.