Sunday, March 9, 2014

The Diddy

When Mags was born I was so well prepared to be a proper nursing mama.  I was going to have deep, bonding moments with my baby girl and nothing was going to stop me.  I was going to heed all of the warnings about pacifiers interrupting the rhythms of nursing and by god there was no way I was going to allow my bond with her to be interrupted.  

Until I realized even the best of us nursing super heroes need to sleep.   So.

I remember reluctantly watching my sister in law gently trying to nudge a little rubber pacifier into Maggie's rosebud mouth one tiresome evening.  As she pressed her little lips together in defiance I thought to myself...this isn't going to work...

But it did work.  It worked that time and for years after.  It worked when we needed to quiet her.  It worked for long car rides.  It worked when she felt insecure or lonely or unsteady.  It became an extension of her.  And even when I knew deep, deep down she was too old, I still relented.  Giving it up was a big step.  Big for her and big for me. 

After she had finally let it go I took her over to see her Peeps to let him know of the big decision she had made.  On the way back she looked up at me with clear blue eyes and said, "I think Peeps is acting so proud of me Mama, so I think I need to be proud of me, too"

Yes baby, a thousand times yes.  

But when I allow myself to day dream of your first years I will always see them like this….












 


Saturday, February 22, 2014

Carrying Stones

My girls are almost 2 and 4.  Each day I watch love and anger spill over from one onto the other.  One second they are trading hugs and the next they are fighting with such fury it startles me.   We talk about forgiveness, we talk about being nice, we talk about keeping our hands to ourselves.  We talk 'outwards' to the way we treat others an awful lot.
I was born a very sensitive person.  I am sensitive to how I am perceived and how I perceive other people.  Look up sensitive in a thesaurus and one would see that it can mean many things.  Sensitive can be thoughtful and subtle.  It can be insightful, impressionable and perceptive.  It can also be awkward, difficult and embarrassing.  Sensitivity is vulnerability.  I often did my very, very best to hide it.  I was so lucky to have a loving family that was quick to encourage me and point out all the things that were beautiful and precious in me early on and I relished in those things.  But as is inevitable, I also encountered insults, teasing, and moments of fear and humiliation and at some point I began collecting those encounters like stones.  I was sensitive to each and every strike.  I learned to hold on to them.  I taught myself to assign value to their weight.   I was born with a million questions and bright inquisitive eyes, with fair skin and curly auburn hair.  Each time I was teased about my skin being the color of dead fish or for ‘kissing up’ in class it felt like the strike of a little shard of granite.  I would work against the sharp edges of that granite, rolling it over and over until the shard wore off and the surface wore smooth like a heavy river rock, and then I would deposit its weight in my bag.  
At first I deposited freckles and teacher’s pet.  I deposited not sitting with the popular girls before dance class or knowing how to style my hair the right way.  It wasn’t long until I learned to deposit what I should have said but didn’t or said but shouldn’t.  It took no time at all to learn to take hits of rejection in friendships and relationships and wear them down to smooth stones to be easily carried.  
At some point, during my teenage years, my bag felt full enough for me to start hurling granite shards of my own.  At times I was whipping them with such ferocity and fear, I could almost forget the weight of my own bag.  I carried that bag for a long time.  I carried it until it was thread bare, worn through my teens and my twenties and it was only in my recent years that it occurred to me to drop the bag.  And when I did, the stones shattered like glass upon the concrete floor of understanding, for they had been frail and hollow all along.  They were weighted only with the value I had so generously filled them with.
I learned two very important lessons from my time carrying those stones.  The first is that I don’t believe they are ever first cast because we are looking to strike at one another’s sensitivities.  I believe they are thrown in desperation.  We believe that the sting of the strike will distract someone else from our own place of sensitivity, of vulnerability.   We all throw stones, some are larger than others.  I try not to focus on what is thrown at me anymore, because I understand what the weight of carrying my own feels like.
The second lesson is that we pray and preach and guide our babies to treat others as we ourselves would like to be treated.  
We push them to forgive, to love, to be kind, to be gentle….we teach them to be kind to others.  
But we forget to remind them over, and over, and over again that they need to be the first recipients of their own kindness.  That perhaps they are the most important recipient of their own love and forgiveness.  
Love always…always.  comes from a place within. 

I don't know when the first stone will strike them.  I don't know when they will cast their first one.  But I pray I can show them the power of forgiveness.   I pray they learn how very, very worthy they are of love.








Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Snow Days

I sat down with a lot of words.   But, most days (especially the snow covered ones) are more about the effort.










Wednesday, January 29, 2014

Truth or Dare

I haven't really been inspired to write in this space for awhile.  I don't have anything loving or inspirational to share.  I don't have a special message to convey.  Sometimes (and by sometimes I mean all of the time) I am completely overwhelmed with even the suggestion that any one of us is capable of doing all of the things, all of the time,  that being a mother seems to require.

Sometimes motherhood just feels like a giant game of 'Truth or Dare'

Dare:  Be the most inspiring, amazing mama on the planet.

Truth(s):

1. I don't know how to divide my energy between satisfying my dreams and supporting their needs, at the same time, all the time. I am working on it.  We are all a work in progress.

2. I rush home at lunch to clean the house because sometimes trying to create a clean home and a loving home at the same time after work overwhelms me.

3.  I've bribed, I've begged, I've borrowed and I would steal if it would guarantee me one morning of sleeping past 7:00am.

4. It's insane that nobody warned me how indescribable the bond would be between me and these girls.  There are no words for it.

5.  I'm tired.  I am tired all the time and I bet you are, too.  I spend a lot of time (too much time) beating myself up for not finding a way to get to bed earlier, manage my time better, manage my children better…..

6.  I need to acknowledge that at some point the way that I treat myself will be the model my girls will look to when deciding just how important their place in this world should be.

It's a work in progress…
 










Friday, January 10, 2014

On Gratitude and Turning 34

So.  34 was supposed to be really good.  Mid-30's, settled in life, feeling comfortable in my own skin and all of that.  I took Harper to the pediatrician for her healthy visit early in the morning and thought of a million magical ways we could spend the rest of my day off together.

But then.

The annoying twitch in my left eye I had been ignoring for the past 24 hours decided to hi-jack my birthday.

A couple hours later and I'm sitting in the waiting room of my own primary physician's office trying to smile politely at other waiting individuals while discreetly shooting 'don't you dare' stares at my girls as they deviously assess the situation and start to understand they are free to bust out, because mama can't see!  My eye kept swelling bigger and my vision got worse and they took advantage, enough said.

Conjunctivitis while caring for toddlers is merciless.  I left my dignity back in that waiting room somewhere between my tug-of-war with Harper to put her abandoned rain boots back on and the one millionth time I threatened Maggie that she would go home to a closet emptied of princess dresses if she didn't stop tearing the contents of her backpack apart.  I nearly lost my shit.  I let self-pity and anger wash over me.  And trust me friends, the next couple of days didn't look much better.

Because for the love of God.

How many visits to pediatricians and primary care doctors does a girl need to make before paying her first year of pre-school dues??  We've spent a lot of ordinary days in waiting rooms this year, hot and sweating, sick and tired.  This one just happened to fall on my dreary, rainy birthday.  Just like any other ordinary day of parenting.

But here's the thing.  Some days are hard.  But hard is a relative concept.  Each one of us Mamas is facing a hard, hard, battle on any given day.  Some battles are minor and some are unimaginable but regardless, we all fight with the same intensity because it is born out of love and gratitude for the little miracles gifted to us, however fleeting.

Love.  And Gratitude.

Perhaps what I really needed to be gifted, with rain falling upon the faces of two beautiful, healthy babies on the day of my birth, was Gratitude.











Gratitude that the worst worry on my mind that day was a harmless eye infection. Gratitude that I have reliable, accessible healthcare and insurance that means such a minor inconvenience could be treated so immediately.  Gratitude for the fact that my babies are safe, healthy and loved.  Most importantly, loved, and by so many.

Perhaps sometimes we need to be made blind so that we can feel true love and gratitude again.

I was blind, and now I see.



Saturday, December 28, 2013

Where Dreams Await

She won't be little forever.  I get that.  But she still fits in my lap.  She still uses a pacifier to sooth herself and she still fits in a size 2T.  So she's still little...for now.  

I still see her as an extension of me.  Not yet giving her credit for being a fully developed little soul that is independent of her mama.  So seeing her on a big stage?  At a preschool Christmas concert?  

Looking for direction and guidance from a loving teacher as I sit in the audience playing the minor role of spectator during one of her life experiences aches in such a lovely way.  In fact, it splits my heart wide open for her.









'In your light I learn how to love.
In your beauty, how to make poems.

You dance inside my chest,
where no one sees you,

but sometimes I do,
and that sight becomes this art.

Rumi





And then I am reminded that this little piece of magic still has a few precious moments left with her mama before her independence pulls her from my grasp.



Where dreams await...