Yearly Archives: 2011

Escaping False Prisons

Momalom wrote a post today about life with 3 kids, and Kristen @ Motherese responded with these beautiful words:

“To me, the most powerful sentence in your post was this: “Because this was exactly what I wanted.” So often, when overwhelmed by chaos and crying and so much touching, I forget that this is the life that I always wanted.”

It’s funny how easy it is for us to forget that sometimes.
When I’m balancing the teeter totter that is life with kids I can get bogged down in the details:  buying groceries, cooking thankless meals; doing another load of laundry; driving to umpteen practices; attending school book fairs and conferences and PTO meetings; sorting stacks of mail; staring at unread magazines; fitting in blogging, twittering and writing; losing myself; finding myself; and figuring out how to get up and do it all over again tomorrow.
When I get lost in the details it’s easy for me to glamorize the other path, the people who live where I thought I’d live, or do what I thought I’d do, or are who I thought I’d be.
But then I stop.
I stop because I understand that I have the power to change these things—where I live and what I do and who I am.  And I choose not to.  Trivialities are not what comprise a life.
The fabric of my life is rich and woven from colorful strands of family, friends, and community.  Yes, my children can be exhausting and yes, there are days I dream of coconuts and palm trees.  But if I decide it’s palm trees that I really want, well, then, I can move to where the palm trees grow.
That’s the thing, isn’t it?  We stay where we are until we decide to move elsewhere—and I mean this both figuratively and literally.  Our pantries get organized when we organize them.  Our careers progress when we take actions steps.  Often, we’re only trapped by ideas of our own construct.  In her book, Steering by Starlight, Martha Beck describes this notion with her favorite cartoon.  She says:

“It shows two haggard captives staring through the bars of a prison window.  The odd thing is that there are no walls on the prison; the two men are simply standing in the open, holding bars to their faces with their own hands.”

I know what she means.  A few years into this Midwest gig, when I still longed to move back east with my preppy little tribe, I used to think, “We’re stuck here.  We can’t move because my husband started a business,” but that’s wasn’t exactly true.  We weren’t stuck.  That vision was my own cartoon prison.  We could’ve left the business.  I could’ve moved east ahead of him.  These weren’t ideal solutions, to be sure.  But they existed—there were options—and I was painting myself into a jail that wasn’t there.  Examining those options meant examining what I really wanted, which is an entirely different deal than feeling stuck.  When I finally sat down with my list of pros and cons (because ya’ll know that’s how I roll), the grass wasn’t much greener back east after all.  But getting out of prison?  That was fantastic.
How about you?  Are there times you’ve felt stuck?  Were there options you weren’t seeing?  

Turmoil

Amanda Knox came home today.

Twenty-two years ago as I saw Venice and Florence and Rome for the first time, I clutched my Eurail pass and followed my wanderlust as far as my lira would take me.
Three years ago, my husband and I watched our kids frolic in the afternoon sunshine as we savored red wine and hors’ devours on the deck of our rented Tuscan villa, less than an hour from the now infamous Perugia.
Like probably every single girl who ever studied abroad, I’ve followed the Amanda Knox case with curiosity, horror, and a small ache in the pit of my belly. 
The case is a mess of confusion and accusation and no real answers.  I’ve never been sure—how can I be—about what happened that night.  And I don’t know enough about the Italian justice system to know whether “innocent until proven guilty” is a thing by which they also abide. I held my breath yesterday as I watched the verdict live, hoping for her freedom, because the evidence just doesn’t seem to be there, and hoping beyond hope she deserves it. The outcome is terrible either way.  If she’s innocent, as the courts held yesterday, the murder is a horrible tragedy for Meredith Kercher and an abhorrent miscarriage of justice for Amanda Knox who lost four years of her live in a cell she never should have entered.  If, God help her, she was involved in this gruesomeness, it’s a horror that will never end.
But that ache in the pit of my belly?  It’s not for Amanda.   And it’s not there because of some sophomoric idea that, “There, but for the grace…”  I’ve got hindsight and age on my side:  it’s fairly easy to look back and know that although my study-abroad crowd had fun, we didn’t run wild—or much at all, really—with locals. 
No, that ache exists for the sake of my children, for my boys who I want to experience adventure and travel and life in the wide, wide world.  The boys who I know aren’t perfect, no more than I was or am, and who will make their share of mistakes and missteps as they find their way.  Of course I can’t imagine any of them involved in a tragedy like this—to even suggest such a thing makes me queasy.  But this case squares its shoulders and stares at me, and other parents who love to travel, and forces us to ask:  should we let them go when we can’t go with them? 
I think we have to.  And in the meantime, my fingers are crossed and my prayers are lifted that the seedy underside of life never calls my kids’ names, that what they learn about heroin and meth they’ll learn the same way I did:  from books like Nic Sheff’s Tweak and his father’s Beautiful Boy.  When I read their words, tears rolled down my face as I sobbed and grasped at every reason this could not happen to my own beautiful boys.  I feel the same way when I watch Amanda Knox.
The ache is for my children.  

Rainy Day Activities for Kids

So it’s gray and rainy today.  It was gray and rainy yesterday.  And it’s supposed to be gray and rainy tomorrow.

Needless to say, we’re going a bit stir crazy here in the house-of-boys.  You can only last so long outside in the rain.  At least 2 of my 3 boys can read chapter books in a cozy chair on days like this.  I love that.  My youngest?  Not so much.  And I remember the days, very recently, when all three of them were standing there, looking up at me with those big expectations, asking, “What’s next, Mom?”

My opinion?  The best way to survive these days with a smile in your face is to throw in the towel.  Yes, that’s right.  My great parenting nugget for the day is….drumroll please…throw in the towel.  Fine words of wisdom, don’t you think?  What I mean by this is that a rainy day is a day for us to forget our Very Important List of Things to Do, get down on the floor with our kids, and remember what it’s like to simply play.

Rainy Day Activities:

  1. Make a Fort.  The old stand-by is as good as ever.  Kids in every state and every town love nothing better than building an Awesome Fort out of couch pillows, blankets, and sheets.  But the real giddiness kicks in when they see that mom is actually going to join them in the Fort.  The smiles you’ll receive are worth every single thing you didn’t get done today that you will absolutely pay for tomorrow.
  1. Break out the Perler Beads.  As I’ve mentioned before, Perler Beads are a fantastic activity for kids to do on their own.  But they’re fun to work on together, too.  Your kids can create beautiful designs to give to Grandma and Grandpa for the upcoming Mother’s and Father’s Day celebrations.  After you’ve ironed their masterpiece, simply stick a magnet strip on the back & your gift is ready to go.
  1. Break the Rules.  No running in the house?  No hiding in the pantry?  Take a half an hour today, ditch the rules, and play indoor hide-and-seek.  That thing that breaks?  It’s just part of the deal.  Plan on it, and it won’t seem so tragic.
  1. Break Bread Together.  Eat your snack the floor!  Another ageless old-timer, the picnic-on-the-living-room-floor is a sure crowd pleaser.  Feed the baby first and have your picnic with the older kids during naptime.  (Babies tend to be a little messy for the living room.)  I have a huge piece of canvas fabric that we put down to spare the carpet.  The kids shriek with joy when I pull it out.  The mayhem that ensues, in anticipation of peanut butter and jelly that they don’t have to eat at the table, is a bit unbelievable.
  1. Rediscover Rubber Ducky.  On a rainy day (no, not one with lightening), the bathtub can serve as a small pool.  Don’t worry about the clean-factor.  This bathtime is just for fun.  Bubbles, toys, bath paints, splashing:  it’s all included.  The bonus?  You don’t have to get in…you’re just the lifeguard for this one.
  1. Special Box of Toys.  What?  You don’t have one?  Oh, you gotta get one!  All the cool kids have ’em.  Okay, here’s the deal: our children have too many toys.  Can we agree on this one?  We buy, our parents buy, our friends buy.  Too much buying.  When I realized our windows were on the verge of popping out because of all the excess, I just wanted to chuck it.  Goodwill, here we come.  But my friend intervened.  “Buy a large plastic bin,” she suggested.  “Fill it with lots of these toys, then put it away for a rainy day.  When the rainy day comes, pull out the bin.  The kids will be so excited to play with these “special” toys.”  Hmmm…  And she was right.  Thank you, friend!  Goodwill still received a donation, but we save some for the Special Box that creates Special Fun on rainy days.
  1. Make a Movie.  These are some of my most treasured keepsakes, and I didn’t have a thing to do with them.  My husband, bless his heart, spends hours with the boys creating movies.  They’ve “gone” to Africa, flown into outer space, and even fought aliens.  I watch these movies and I can’t believe how little they once were!  Those voices!  I promise you, moms, their voices will change, their annunciation will improve, and to be able to hear them, to see them in action at those tiny little ages, is a precious gift.  The movies are a bit of a pain to make, with props and all, and they’re definitely time consuming.  In other words, it’s the perfect activity for an otherwise boring, rainy day.
  1. Make Play-Doh.  Play-Doh is such a kid-pleaser, but no one likes it when they peel off the lid and instead of easy to mold clay-like material, they find the hard, gross substance formerly known as Play Doh.  My neighbor, Pam, gave me a recipe about years ago (see below) and this stuff lasts forever.  It’s kind of weird how long it lasts, actually.  Sometimes it gets a little sticky – just add a touch more flour, and you’re ready to shape and mold.
  1. Or, Make Dough Figures.  During the holidays, my kids make something for their teacher’s, grandparents, and other lucky souls.  One of the things they’ve created is dough ornaments.  (Yep, I like the oldies.  What gave it away?)  This dough is easy to work with – just don’t over bake it!  If you’re feeling extra crafty, the kids can paint their designs once they’re dry.
  1. Keep a Few Tricks Up Your Sleeve. Under no circumstances, no matter how gray and rainy it is, are you, the parent, to use all of these tricks in the same day.  Pace yourself, people.  Pick a few, and maybe a back-up, and go for it.  Trying to make play-doh, build a fort, and have a living-room picnic on the same day is just asking for trouble.  There’s always tomorrow.
Homemade Play-Doh Recipe:
2 c flour 2 c water
1 c salt 2 T oil
4 t cream of tartar food coloring
(This makes a ton.  Sometimes I just make half.)
Mix all ingredients in a saucepan.  Cook for 2-3 minutes, stirring constantly.  Stir in food coloring.  Remove from heat.  Put mixture onto waxed paper and knead.  Add extra flour, if sticky.
Dough Figures/Ornaments Recipe
1 c salt 1 c water
2 c flour food coloring (optional)
 Mix salt and flour, then add water a little at a time.  If you’re using food coloring, separate dough into different bowls, add color, and mix.  Knead for 7-10 minutes until dough is putty-like.
Create people, animals, or other figures with dough.  For ornaments, roll dough to ¼” thick (I go a little thicker).  Use cookie cutters for basic shapes, like snowflakes, Christmas balls, or snowmen. 
Bake on cookies sheet at 325 until very light brown.

Enjoy the rain!

This updated re-post is here today courtesy of the weather!