I am appalled with myself that I haven't written in almost a month. Here are my lame excuses:
(1) The big case I'm working on went crazy, people lost their minds, and I was left to clean up the mess. 300 hours a month. Three months in a row. Exhausted is a nice word for what I am. Thus, today I am working from home in my sweats.
(2) The damned vertigo has reared it's ugly head in a way that has finally forced me to see the doctor and figure out why it will not stop.
However, I really a determined to make it better. To start making my life as important as my career. I made it to class last night to observe, and I was itching to get back out there. I really do train with the best people--though I have a confession to make: I'm terrified to train with guys again.
When I first started training, I was the only girl every night and so I didn't even have the option to train with women. I worked really hard to encourage women to train, and eventually we had so many women training we had to add a women's class that usually had at least four women attend. Some days we had so many women in regular class that we did our own thing during drilling and sparring. I also started going to girls' class at a gym about 50 miles away every Saturday to train with different women. In short, I apparently became a big chicken about rolling with guys. I tried to suck it up, and then at belt promotion in August, my worst fears came true.
At our academy we play a game on promotion day called the Rubber Band Game. We each get three rubber bands for our wrists and we spar for about an hour, non-stop. If you lose, you give your opponent your rubber band. The point is to have as many as possible at the end. It is actually really fun, because you are only allowed to spar with your belt level and it is a chance for the people getting promoted to roll with at their belt for the last time. It was my first belt promotion day, and I was really excited. Unfortunately, one of the guys at the academy -- another white belt -- was so into winning the game and took it too personally and too far. After my husband, who was promoted to blue later that day (YAY!!) beat him in about 30 seconds (as per usual) he noticed I didn't have a partner yet and asked me to roll. As I sat down and we slapped hands, he told me that my husband had just beaten him and he was going to need to make sure to get a rubber band back. He then went really really hard at me, and knocked the wind out of me and took my arm. I tapped fast, because it wasn't worth it. As he was taking my rubber band he told me to tell my husband they were even.
I was in shock. I couldn't believe it had actually happened. I bragged about my academy being a place where women aren't treated any differently and I feel safe. I didn't feel safe and I didn't feel like I could tell anyone. I told my husband eventually, and my professors, and they took care of it, but it has me really rattled. I'm actually really scared to roll with any guy that is even remotely bigger than me now. The vertigo and my job has been a great excuse to stay off the mat, but it has made the fear of rolling with guys even worse.
On top of it, I don't really have any women to talk about it with anymore. And I'm so embarrassed about being scared to roll with guys that I don't want to admit it to the two women I train most with because they are such tough women who never back down from drilling or rolling with men.
If anyone has any suggestions on how to get over it, I'd love to hear them.