Comment Update: Thank you all for you lovely support and words. Due to the storm, I never got a chance to go back and respond to all of these amazing comments. While it is my custom to publicly answer comments, I am opting to respond individually via email. Considering all that has happened and with some distance, answering it all “out there” feels a bit off to me. But please know, I do so appreciate all the kind words and sentiments. It means the world to me that so many of you chose to participate on this post.

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When I was 13, my cousin came to live with us for a year. We were the same age, but in very different places in our lives. In fact, our lives couldn’t have been more different. Our mothers may have been sisters, but that’s where the similarity ended. Sadly, that difference could not be breached—we had no idea at the beginning how impossible it would be for her to live in our world.

In retrospect, as much we tried, I don’t think we tried hard enough. Not because we were bad people, or mean people. But we were uniformed people. We were clueless and ill prepared. My parents might disagree… and I can’t speak for them. Their issues with this young girl were not mine. They dealt with the hard stuff of parenting, and I can’t judge one way or another if what they did was what needed to be done. But as a collective whole, I don’t think we even understood the enormity of the gulf between our way of living and the life she had previously known. We made no attempt to bridge it either. We simply expected her to fit in, to adjust, to become part of the family. She drowned in the ocean between our continents. She couldn’t swim. We couldn’t rescue.

What stands out about that year, to my eternal shame, is the fact that my cousin was tone deaf. Except, she had no idea. If American Idol had existed then, this child would have moved mountains to audition. She was going to be a star! And not just any star, a recording artist. She would have been famous, but for all the wrong reasons. It would have been this sweet, but deluded girl featured on the wannabe roll. Singing at the top of her lungs, in one ear wrenching note, “It’s the, Eye of the Tiger, it’s the thrill of the fight!”

As painful as it was to listen to her sing, it was more painful to listen to her dream. And this is where we failed. Where I failed specifically. You see, we didn’t allow her the delusion. Instead, we tried to impress upon her that a recording contract probably wasn’t in her future. I’m ashamed to admit, that we taped this poor kid belting out Survivor and made her listen.

She was only 13. She had nothing else but this dream. What we couldn’t see, was just that. It was her dream—delusion or no, we had no business taking that from her. I wish I hadn’t done it. I wish I could go back and be the patient kind of person she needed me to be. The kind of person who kept my cringing to myself and loved her for her little dream. Life would soon strip her of any hope she might have had; I didn’t need to be party to that robbery.

Delusions and dreams. There’s such a fine line between the two; it’s usually in the eye of the beholder. Or, ear. And I wonder, who would she have become if someone had believed in her dreams? It’s not that simplistic, is it? I mean, there were educational hurdles and behavioral issues that can’t be solved by believing you’re going to be famous. Wishful thinking. Magical thinking. Delusional thinking. That child needed a dose of reality. Right?

Here’s the thing. That’s all she’d ever had, reality. And it was a painful, loveless, abuse filled reality. She clung to a dream of a different life, where she would leave all the reminders of the hell she came from behind.

We all need to be delusional from time to time. Life has a way of bringing us into reality on its own. It’s not to say that when our dreams border on delusion, we don’t need people to come along side and suggest, softly, alternative ways of grounding ourselves to reality without losing our passions. But we don’t need people destroying our dream too soon. Not really. And as tempting as it might be, as good intended as we might think we are, what benefit is there in pointing out the obvious to the oblivious? Sometimes, there is a reason that tone-deaf children believe they’re going to be stars.

So the photo above… these pants, are my delusion. Evidently, I am tone deaf. But not so blissfully as I would like.

Last month I decided that I would move Thrifty Goodness over to etsy. And to my utter dismay, it’s doing just fine there. Better than fine, if you consider I’m not doing much to promote that change. When I consider the effort and work and hours that went into launching my own store—I’m sick to my stomach at having missed my moment. Etsy was the way to go from the beginning and I’m now playing catch-up.

However, with the move a terrible thing has been made very clear to me. Etsy allows viewers to “favorite” items in any given store. And if you troll through my store, and click on the “see who hearts this item” you will find that most of the things I’ve listed have fans. Several fans in many cases. I’m hearted all over the place. Except. . . except for the things I’ve made myself. Evidently, the world of etsy likes vintage but thinks that I am tone deaf. There’s little ol’ me, singing at the top of my lungs while the viewing world clamps virtual hands over their ears, cringing.

Oh. The. Horror. Seriously, I’m embarrassed. I want my delusions. I like them. Every time I step into my craft room with a new idea I can just feel it in my bones, “I’m going to be a star!”

Except, in a virtual form of what can only be Karma if Karma worked that way, I’m the only one who thinks so. And I’m surrounded by people who are with-holding “hearts” that tells me otherwise.

I can’t help but think of my cousin. I’m realizing that at nearly 40 I might be learning this lesson too late. In terms of her reality and mine, there is NO comparison. I feel lame even making the connection. But it’s what I’m thinking about today. Because, I’m an adult, and I’m going to get over the fact that I’m tone deaf. I’m going to get past the fact that no-one likes my handmade items. It’s just my ego at stake—not my survival. But, there is a 13 year old girl inside of me who mourns that I could not even begin to imagine, much less empathize with another 13 year old girl who needed more than anything for me to Heart her dream. And that part me, really is sad. Because as stupid and lame and absolutely INCONSEQUENTIAL a store on etsy is… it’s rendered me to the core thinking about real love and real dreams and real compassion.

So, there’s not much I can do. I can nurse my bruised ego. And I can tell my darkest secrets to you—hoping you will go out and HEART other people’s dreams, even if you consider them delusions. But I cannot change the past. I cannot love my cousin the way she needed. I can only sing at the top of my lungs and hope that she has found a way to keep singing too.