Category Archives: birthdays

Celebrating 13: How do you throw a party for a 13 year old boy?

When my son was born I couldn’t imagine this day. I couldn’t see past the diapers and onesies and sudden mounds of laundry created by a very small 7 pound 8 ounce baby. I couldn’t imagine having an hour to myself much less conjure the day this boy would be making plans with his friends that didn’t involve the word playdate.

But the day has come.

How to celebrate?

This was a real quandary for me. If you’ve read here for any length of time, you know I’m a fan of the down-home birthday party. There have been pirate parties and jungle parties and gazillion of other parties involving cake, ice cream, balloons, lots of children, and some variation of the “hot potato” game.

But 13. You know, it’s just not that cool to play hot potato anymore. So what are the options?

  • Two of his friends had pool parties at the homes of family friends of theirs that have pools. Not only do we not have a pool of our own, we don’t have close friends with a pool of their own, so…pool party: out.
  • Sleepover? Yuck. I was so NOT up for that.
  • Boys at the cottage? Tubing, mini-golf, beach, s’mores? Fun, yes, but how many boys would you want to take tubing? And then the sleepover is inevitable. Double yuck.

So here’s what we decided: we’d go for the element of surprise. We just threw an end-of-the-school-year party, where I had 22 kids at my house, so I WAS NOT UP FOR A HUGE PARTY. As such, we didn’t invite all of his friends, just a few we knew were in town that weekend. We settled on a date a full two weeks before his birthday (before he pinned me down with his frequent, “Mom, what are we going to do for my birthday this year?”) Included: cake, ice cream, enough soda and Doritos to scare any parent, an outdoor movie projected in our backyard, and a request for your parents to pick you up at 11:00. See, that’s the bonus of being 13–your friends can go home really late and it’s totally fine. Hooray!

This also marks the first time I didn’t make his cake myself, because how on earth could I explain making a birthday cake so far in advance of his birthday? Instead, we bought this lovely gem at Costco which may have been enough cake to feed our entire town. It was quite tasty, I must admit. And wow, placing the order and picking it up: so easy!

On his actual birthday, we took him to Chicago to see the Harry Potter Exhibit at the Museum of Science and Industry and, if I say so myself, that was a great idea all the way around. Chicago: awesome! Harry Potter exhibit: very cool! Legoland Discovery Center: fine, but mini-lego of Chicago skyline: awesome!


And since I haven’t found my camera, my very very very pretty and very very very nice friend Sharee’ lent me hers for the weekend. Because I’m so responsible, you know. I’d never lose it.

As Old as the Super Bowl

“Mom, Mom, so do you think the Packers will do better this year than last year,” he asks, as he plops down on my bed.

Looking up from my makeshift desk in my bedroom at our cottage: “I don’t know, honey. I’m really trying to get this article done.”

“The Packers are really good.  But they haven’t won’t a Super Bowl since you were about 27.  Right?”

“I guess that’s right.  They won when I lived there.”

“So have they only won one Super Bowl while you’ve been alive?”

A bit exasperated, concentration broken:  “I guess so.”

“Wait, no. No.  They’ve won three Super Bowls.  The first, the second and the thirty first.  You were born in 1968, right, so you were alive for the second.  But you were still zero.”

Silence.

“Right, mom?  Right?”

“Hmmm, that sounds about right.” 

Wait a minute.  I’ve been around for almost as long as the Super Bowl?  Ack, that’s depressing!

My Baby’s Growing Up

I should have been a Boy Scout. Always Be Prepared, that’s my motto. When I found out I was expecting our first child, I practically memorized What to Expect When You’re Expecting. I charted my Daily Dozen (enough dark green veggies? too much salt?) and avoided nitrates like the plague. I checked diaper prices at different stores, bought lots of plain white onesies, and practiced my Lamaze breathing. I read everything I could get my hands on and I understood that babies needed lots of love, that taking care of one was hard work, and that in those newborn months I would be really, really tired.

Except I didn’t. I didn’t really understand at all. As all mothers know, the books can describe motherhood for us, but until we’re there, we don’t really get it. I didn’t realize, for example, the enormous responsibility I would suddenly feel for this life, this tiny little life I was holding in my arms, that would one day grow into a man. I didn’t know how overwhelming it would be to take care of such a tiny little soul. I knew I’d be tired, but I didn’t understand that the exhaustion would be overwhelming. I never expected to feel angry when my sweet baby, just a few weeks out of the womb, woke up in the middle of the night hungry, once again. I never imagined the morning that I’d beg my husband to stay home, to please stay home and help, as I crumpled onto my bed in tears.

But time passed. After a few months, my growing baby started sleeping 12 hours a night, and with uninterrupted sleep, my sanity returned. One day followed the next, and soon he was smiling and clapping and sitting up in the bathtub. Life was good. When my next baby came, I was ready. This time I expected the exhaustion, and made accommodations for it. The second time around was so much easier, and I breathed a sigh of relief. By the time he was 6-months old, we were all into the swing of things and life with two little ones was even better than I could’ve predicted. A few years later, my third son tried to derail all of us with his constant preference for me. Used to babies that napped well and slept through the night after a few months, I didn’t know what to do with this insistent little guy, who complained every single night when I placed him in his crib. I rocked, and consoled, and tried my best, but he never wavered. He was almost 1 ½ before he went to sleep without complaint, and many of those nights I cried right along with him. But time kept ticking, and he’s grown into a lovely boy, a charmer, a complete sweetheart who sleeps like an angel.

As my angels sleep, I continue to read. I read about toddlers, I read about discipline, I read about raising boys and feeding kids and learning styles. And I find a lot of good stuff in these books, really, I do. But I’ve reached a point, once again, where books have failed me. While I understand perfectly well that my children are independent souls, while I know that part of my goal in raising them is to help them become strong, compassionate young men with thoughts of their own, I find myself as unprepared for their growing up as I was for their newborn midnight waking. As my oldest becomes a teenager, I know that this boy is not merely an extension of me; he is his own person. And yet it feels like a part of my body is tearing away, I can feel the flesh ripping, near my heart, while tears pour from my eyes when I lay down at night. My mind understands it all, but my heart is breaking.

We still have time, I know. Six years until he leaves for college, and we still have the joy of puberty to endure in the meantime. I am excited to see the man he becomes, but I can still feel the baby in my arms, and I can’t imagine how we’ve gotten this far already. Thirteen years ago, older moms in the grocery stores and restaurants cooed at my baby and I didn’t understand. They told me to enjoy my little one, because the time goes so fast. But my days and nights seemed endless then, and I didn’t get it; I couldn’t comprehend. Countless parents have informed me that when my son hits high school, it’s a flash and he’ll be gone. Be Prepared, I tell myself. Be Prepared. But I know, now, I know that no matter how often I hear it or how much I read about it, I won’t be. I won’t ever be prepared for the leaving and I can’t possibly understand what it will feel like until we get there. But that’s something, I think. Recognizing that phases and stages will take me by surprise, understanding that I’m not prepared: there’s something to that, and I think that’s the best I can do for now.