Two. Soon you will be two.
In the early morning hours you still call for me and once settled you curl your tiny little body against me and go limp with the comfort. I feel your tiny fingers curl around my ear and the deep, deep calm take over you.
I would sell my soul to guarantee you a life of comfort and calm.
I can't recall a single day since you were born into this world that you haven't awakended with joy in your heart and light your eyes and I will be forever grateful for that. How miraculously lucky we have been my angel. You light up our lives with your spirit and there is fire in your eyes.
You are eager in your independence. You want to dress yourself, ride your bike yourself, do it all yourself. You walk with a little swagger and smirk that we all adore so very, very much because it is the very essence of you my little wanderer.
We see you. We cherish you.
Tuesday, May 20, 2014
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
They See You
They see you. These little people that carry your heart around outside your body balanced precariously like a sippy cup without a lid. They see you try and try and try until your strength gives out and crafts lead to meltdowns and holidays dissolve into sugar tantrums and the most menial of tasks to clean up the million scraps of torn paper becomes capable of shaking your belief that you are actually doing a good job.
They see all of the messy, beautiful effort. They see you fail and they see you succeed. They see you struggle because you don't have all of the answers right now, but for their sake you so heartbreakingly, desperately want to.
They see you. And they love you because of all of it and despite all of it.
Let them see. Let them see the messy, beautiful effort of it. Because with every tantrum, every tear, every day that wasn't so hot and every day that was, you teach. You teach that they should get up each day and struggle and fight and dream because their dreams are always valid. You teach them that they are worthy of struggle and their values are worthy of the fight.. You teach them that because maybe there will be a day when no one else will.
You teach them that they are worthy of being seen. They are always, always worthy of being seen.
Let them see you. Because you are worthy, too.
They see all of the messy, beautiful effort. They see you fail and they see you succeed. They see you struggle because you don't have all of the answers right now, but for their sake you so heartbreakingly, desperately want to.
They see you. And they love you because of all of it and despite all of it.
Let them see. Let them see the messy, beautiful effort of it. Because with every tantrum, every tear, every day that wasn't so hot and every day that was, you teach. You teach that they should get up each day and struggle and fight and dream because their dreams are always valid. You teach them that they are worthy of struggle and their values are worthy of the fight.. You teach them that because maybe there will be a day when no one else will.
You teach them that they are worthy of being seen. They are always, always worthy of being seen.
Let them see you. Because you are worthy, too.
Tuesday, April 8, 2014
The Messy, Glorious, Beautiful Truth - My Messy Beautiful
You can’t escape the truth of you. You can shame it or bury it deep and deny it. You can attempt to reject it. You can smother it in white hot rage or try to stifle the breath from it but it will live on. Your truth lives on in all of its messy, beautiful glory because it is you and you live on. Such curious creatures we are really. Creatures who need so feverishly to offer up love and have it accepted and yet fight so hard to conceal the vulnerable, honest places where that love is needed most.
Truth and Vulnerability are a work in progress for me. I conceal and I hide. I use my decisions as a mother, a spouse, a lover, a child to build ever higher walls because I believe they offer up the safest compromise, that they offer the greatest benefit to my loved ones, because I believe that they are for the best. I craft an elaborate fortress of decisions. I make decisions because I want them all to be happy. I want them to be comforted. I want them to experience the beautiful without the brutal part. I build for them you see, and in doing so I lock me in.
And then the fury comes. The fury comes fast and white and hot because I know that I can’t give them the beautiful without the brutal no matter what the effort. And then the fear seeps in, the fear that I am as much capable of hurting them as I am capable of loving them. The fear that reminds me of all of my past mistakes and hints at all of the ones I have yet to make. The fear that knows all of my flaws. The fear that rises and crashes so violently that I lean in hard against it to be better, nicer, more giving, prettier, thinner, smarter, more, more. More. I fight against it until I am made still and exhausted because what other choice can I have? The fear knows enough to ask me what happens if they see past all of it and finally realize that it’s not enough? That it was never enough? That I am not enough. How could they still love me then?
I am not the fear.
The fear is not my truth.
The fear can’t take away my truth.
Because the thing about our messy beautiful truth is that it can’t be mitigated by our fear. Truth has such grace and it will rage and rage forth until it finds the fault lines in the protective walls built from judgment and humor and shame. Truth will rage and rage to the light that exists beyond the labels and identities we adapt to entomb it. Truth is fluid. It's beautiful rhythm can rush forth all at once like a breach in a levy or slip by quietly. It can find its way through the smallest of cracks in the granite, until it gathers enough force in its own time to break free from that quiet path towards the more vulnerable place in the light because it wants to be released. I want to be released. I want you to see me.
And that's where the messy, beautiful nature of it all makes us come alive, I think, because the journey back to our most authentic self is so raw and rich and honest. It is born from the messy, beautiful, glorious place of vulnerability. And love is the only authentic thing we have to offer up. Really, love is all we begin with and all that is left to us in the end. It can’t be managed or compromised or bargained away by fear. And it can’t be made safe. Messy. But my God, is it not so Beautiful?
Friday, April 4, 2014
I Believe
I believe that a lifetime exists between our thoughts and our actions.
I believe that black and white and wrong and right aren't real and that peace is found in the sacred middle.
I believe that fear can only drive you to survive, and everything after needs to be motivated by love.
I believe in love.
I believe.
I believe that black and white and wrong and right aren't real and that peace is found in the sacred middle.
I believe that fear can only drive you to survive, and everything after needs to be motivated by love.
I believe in love.
I believe.
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.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)