Thursday, January 22, 2009

I Took A Marriage Mini Break



There aren't many women who at one time or another haven't daydreamed of running away from it all. Maybe it's in the middle of wiping the kitchen bench clean of crumbs for the umpteenth time that day! Perhaps it's when they find themselves practising their labour breathing exercises just to cope with the traffic on the way home from work, knowing they'll be late to the childcare centre again. Or maybe, like me, it's the day they wake up yearning for the time when they were not just a wife, not just a mum, but simply Sue - a person with hopes, dreams and desires just like anyone else.

That's where I was this time last year. At 43, I'd been married to Brad for 16 years, had two teenage boys and work full-time as a ward clerk at Princess Margaret Hospital for Children in Perth where we lived. It was a good job but one I'd held for 10 years. I was finding the stresses increasingly hard to leave behind at the end of the day.

I loved Brad wholeheartedly, but along the way trying to combine being wife, mum and employee, I'd lost me, the woman I was and, for all our sakes, I needed to find her again.

So when my long-service leave came up and I suddenly had three months to play with, I knew it was now or never to have the "ultimate" me time. I decided to get away on my own travelling through South East Asia for three months. I hoped immersing myself in a different environment and throwing away alarm clocks, homework schedules, shopping lists and all the other paraphernalia that comes with being a woman - whether working outside the home or not - would feed my soul and find the clarity I craved for the next stage of my life.

Not everyone found my decision easy to cope with. Brad definitely found it confronting at first and I had to explain it was nothing to do with him, nothing to do with us, but everything to do with me. I wasn't looking for anyone or anything else by going away on my own and I had no doubt I was going to come back to him and our boys.

Others asked if I had marriage problems and basically skirted around the issue - I didn't and I knew that. They could think what they wanted. We compromised by agreeing for Brad to join me on the last leg of my trip, where we would then trek through the Himalayas to Everest Base Camp. The boys, Jordan 15 and Dylan 14, just thought I was cool. I think they hoped it was going to be three months of Dad and the lads without Mum around to nag! As my flight to Bangkok drew near I felt nervous, but once I'd kissed my three boys goodbye and dried the tears, I cracked open the champagne and settled back to enjoy the first stage of Operation Rediscovering Sue!

The next few months were beyond words. The trekking in Northern Thailand, sleeping in bamboo huts in hill villages, zipping around on a motorbike, walking alongside a tiger with a Buddhist monk and a yoga and meditation course were highlights. I unwound, met people from all over the world and rediscovered who I was and what I wanted.

When Brad flew into Bangkok the night before our 17th wedding anniversary, we ran into each others' arms. the weeks that followed, trekking through beautiful landscapes, were just like a second honeymoon. Absence most definitely made our hearts grow fonder.

I'd kept in touch with the boys via Skype along the way but it was nothing like holding them in my arms again for a huge hug when we got back to Perth. Taking a sabbatical from my marriage and from motherhood changed so many things for me. I've found peace and contentment, renewed energy to embrace life, not just tolerate it. I came home, left my job and set up a travel company for women and within a few short months, Adventurous Women has become a booming business. The boys see me as a person, not just as mum any more and I hope this whole journey will provide a strong template for their own future relationships. In a marriage you're two people, not one, but it is easy to stagnate because of the demands of life and lose the essence of who you are - however much you love your family.

The past year has taught me it's possible to do whatever you want if you want it badly enough - and feeding your soul is just as important as feeding your family.

Story told by Sue Hile to Ruth Devine, Editor at Grazia Magazine on January 12, 2009

Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Aviation Pioneer Nancy Bird Dies

Famed Australian aviation pioneer Nancy Bird Walton has died aged 93, just months after fulfilling her dream to see the launch of the Qantas super jumbo named in her honour.

The National Living Treasure, as named by the National Trust of Australia in 1997, died from natural causes at her Mosman home on Sydney's north shore about 2pm (AEDT) on Tuesday.

Taught to fly by Charles Kingsford-Smith at age 17, Ms Walton became Australia's first commercially licensed female pilot two years later.

One of the first people to enrol in Kingsford Smith's Mascot flying school, the 150cm-tall Ms Walton needed to sit on two cushions to be able to reach the pedals and see out of the cockpit.

But despite her lack of height and disapproval from her tutor, the NSW-born woman went on to become one the country's most inspirational aviators.

"Smithy didn't quite approve of women flying," Ms Walton once said.

With support from her family, Ms Walton purchased her own Gypsy Moth aircraft and flew around NSW, promoting aviation and taking passengers into the skies. READ MORE