Friday, October 3, 2014

Letting Go

Every little milestone in your child's life is bittersweet.  On the one hand, you don't have to nurse anymore; on the other, you will never nurse this child again.  That period of their life is over, never to return.

You will never be able to carry them in that Baby Bjorn again.

You will never push them in the baby swing again.

They will never say quesadilla as "case-of-dias" again.

You will never carry them again.

Sure, they can get their own drink, walk on their own, swing independently and order their own food at a restaurant without any weird looks, and that's all well and good, but with every step forward, there is the reminder that you cannot go back.

My daughter has a very special baby she received not long before her brother was born.  She named him Jelly (she's always had a knack for naming her guys:  she has a red plaid pig named Rusty, a big pink pig named Squash, a dog named Shovel and a polar bear named Chai, for example).  She immediately decided that Jelly was a boy, despite the fact that he arrived in a very pink outfit.

I vividly remember her 2 year old self mimicking me and her new baby brother; hoisting Jelly up on her hip with a sigh and asking, "How am I going to hold the baby and do the 'puter?"

Jelly has traveled the country with us - even on a flight in which my daughter insisted on wearing him in a sling because he couldn't breathe in her backpack.  Duh, mom!

Although he has a crib of his own, Jelly has always slept in my daughter's bed with her - after all, I co-slept with both of my babies, too.

Then, just a few weeks ago, I went into my daughter's room to kiss her goodnight, and Jelly was tucked gently into his crib for the night for the very first time.

"Jelly's going to try sleeping in his own bed tonight," she explained.

I knew that day would come, of course, and I gave her a reassuring smile while my heart broke a little bit inside.  "I think Jelly will like sleeping in his own bed, and you'll have much more room in your bed for you," I told her confidently.

As I turned out her lights, though, I remembered back to when my babies left the nest of our bed.  How good it felt to have my bed to myself and my husband again... and yet, there was that sadness of knowing that part was over, and we would never go back.  Sure, they might crawl in with us after a nightmare every once in awhile, just as my daughter might bring Jelly back a time or two - to comfort her - but it's not the same.  This period of her life is over.

Then I realized, she's still mimicking me.  She likely felt the same way I did on the first night when I let my babies sleep in their own beds.  She is going through with Jelly what I went through - and am going through still - with her and her brother.  Letting go.

I still feel sad, but comforted, too.  I have no doubt that my daughter will one day have a child of her own, and she will be a wonderful mother; a mother who knows when it's time to let go, and how to do it.




Friday, May 23, 2014

A Reminder

I came across this article on Hands Free Mama today called To Build (or Break) a Child's Spirit, and I simply must share it.  I am the Type A, controlling, anxious, perfectionist mother in the article who is too often criticizing her children instead of building them up - but I have also been the child who was criticized (and many of us were),which led to the voice inside my head that is never happy with me.  It is past time to tell that voice to shut the f*%# up.

It was a brutal realization, but also an inspiration:  "...I will not dwell on yesterday.  Today matters more."

And then I made this, to help me remember better:


Thursday, January 30, 2014

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

A Lesson on Pete Seeger


We lost a very important person yesterday when Pete Seeger passed away.  He was the musical bridge between Woody Guthrie and so many artists, from Bob Dylan and Peter, Paul and Mary to Bruce Springsteen and Dan Zanes, who took the folk music that Seeger preserved and passed it on to future generations.  He was a humble champion of the poor and the environment, and a beloved entertainer of children.  He will be sorely missed, indeed.                                                                                                                                 
Though my kids are somewhat familiar with Pete Seeger, I wanted to make sure they had a firm idea of who he was, so we took advantage of all of the information crowding the internet today, and we read Mr. Seeger's obituary in the New York Times (click on all of the links, too!), watched numerous performances of some of his most famous tunes, and listened to him tell the tale of Abiyoyo (we have the book and cd, but you can watch Pete tell the tale himself on Reading Rainbow here).  We also watched the Scholastic video of The Foolish Frog - a tale that Seeger told his own children.  You can listen to The Foolish Frog here.
One of the best things about homeschooling is being able to take advantage of learning opportunities as they present themselves, and today was a perfect example of that.  We also discovered that Mr. Seeger was really the embodiment of our educational and life philosophy - to question authority, to discover the truth for yourselves and to be true to yourself and follow your passions wholeheartedly.  Take a moment to watch Mr. Seeger play the song What Did You Learn in School Today - it sums it all up nicely:)                                                                                                            



Monday, January 6, 2014

A New Year and the Swirling Vortex of Holiday Terror

I doubt I'm the only parent (or person, for that matter) whose head begins to start spinning sometime around Halloween, and whose head doesn't clear until sometime after the new year has begun.  I have long referred to this phenomenon as "the swirling vortex of holiday terror," and though I've worked hard to stop it from engulfing me in its madness, I have been mostly unsuccessful - especially since the birth of my children.

My son had to make this violent cookie.  Boys.
I try to be "present" as the season starts - to appreciate the round of traditions that begin with a Thanksgiving up north, tree-decorating at my mother-in-law's and the tree-lighting in Cedarburg, where I've helped kids write letters to Santa for a decade.  I'd likely be more successful if my daughter's birthday didn't fall smack dab in the midst of all of that - forcing us to combine special holiday moments with a birthday celebration, while simultaneously trying to give them both the measure of attention they deserve.

Then we're on to finding and decorating our tree, the rounds of cookie baking with family and friends, a cookie exchange, the Nutcracker Ballet and our own Solstice tradition, in which we put food out for the "snow angels" (aka, critters) and hang a special lantern to light up the longest night of the year.

The Solstice lantern
All the while, trying to make time to watch the special Christmas movies (such as Charlie Brown Christmas and Emmett Otter's Jug Band Christmas), listen to the Christmas music and to read the special Christmas books (the titles of which seem to grow each year, but include The Grinch Who Stole Christmas, Carl's Christmas, The Gift of Nothing, Great Joy and Snowmen at Christmas) together next to our tree.  

When Christmas arrives, it's an absolute blur of gatherings and gifts; completely lacking in sleep, but abounding in stress, as we try to cram in whatever we didn't finish, make Christmas miracles for our children and get to every party on time.  It's overwhelming.

By the time I arrive at my birthday, which falls the day before New Year's Eve, I'm exhausted and often sick, but we're still not done:  there's the annual Epiphany play and, finally, my husband's birthday about a week into January (that's right: 3 out of 4 birthdays in our family fall among the holidays - 5 if you include my dad). And though we have all these traditions to mark the season and holiday, I often get to the end and feel that I somehow missed all of it - especially the quiet traditions.  I always feel that I didn't read the stories enough, listen to the music enough or just simply sat and enjoyed our tree enough.

I think we're just too busy.  I think there's just too much.

I envy my friends who hole up in their house and enjoy a long, quiet Christmas by their fireplace.  I don't have a fireplace, but if I did, it would be where I'd spend my Christmas - reading the books, watching the movies and listening to the music while staring at our tree - snuggled up by the fireplace with my family.  It's my dream Christmas - quiet, peaceful and simple.  

I know, I know - first world problems, right?  I shouldn't complain - many people would be envious of our large family to gather with and all of the traditions we have.  Still, I seek to simplify and scale down in this new year; to focus on what really matters so we aren't so overwhelmed.  I suspect that there are many people on that same path; people who are tired by the frantic pace and too much stuff, and I'm hoping that by relating my journey to you, I can help us all.  So, here's to simplicity in 2014!  Happy New Year, everyone.




Friday, November 15, 2013

The Best Thanksgiving Books

It's always bothered me that Thanksgiving has been swallowed up in the swirling vortex of holiday terror that "The Holidays" has become.  At our house, I refuse to put up a single Christmas decoration or hear any of out beloved Christmas music until the day after Thanksgiving, and not a moment before.

One tradition we have at every holiday is to put out our favorite holiday books on the coffee table.  I've started a special page just for Holiday themed books, so you can always check there for my recommendations, but here are some of our favorites for Thanksgiving:

1621  A New Look at Thanksgiving by Catherine O'Neill and Margaret M. Bruchac is an amazing look at what Thanksgiving really was.  This book is really for older children (8 and up), as it is fairly lengthy and detailed, though you could paraphrase and share the pictures to younger children - which I've done and strongly recommend.

The First Thanksgiving by Linda Hayward and the Story of the Pilgrims by Katharine Ross are wonderful introductory books on the holiday, for children 4-8, and The Know-Nothings Talk Turkey, by Michele Sobel Spirn is a fun look at Thanksgiving that young children will enjoy.

A fun project to do with your kids this time of year is to start a Thankfulness Tree.  Cut out leaves on fall colored paper and use a hole puncher to make a hole at the base.  Have children (and parents:) write what they're thankful for and tie with ribbon to some festive dogwood branches and - voila! - you have a Thankfulness tree.

Of course, there's always the handprint turkeys - you can't really go wrong with that.  Actually painting a young child's hand and stamping it is my favorite way to do it, but there are plenty of variations.

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone!

Thursday, November 14, 2013

The Best Thing I Can Do For My Kids

I am my greatest frustration as a parent.  I feel guilty and mad at myself almost daily, but when I feel my worst is when I take it out on my kids - blaming them for my own failure to live up to my own expectations. It happens more often than I'd care to admit, and it particularly happens when I've got too much on my plate - like right now, for instance.

Today, I was inspired by this post on Hands Free Mama:  The Important Thing About Yelling.  In it, the author admits that she was once a parent who yelled at her children.  She describes, in heartbreaking detail, the moment that she realized what that did to her kids and how she overcame it.

It seems that all parents today are under a kind of pressure that my mother, and her mother before her, didn't experience.  We all feel as though we're struggling and failing to succeed in some sort of ill-conceived parenting competition that exists only in our minds.

For me, being a nanny set me up for a heightened feeling of failure as a parent.  All that practice on other people's children and being known as a "professional" childcare provider for so long made me feel an enormous pressure that I had to be the perfect parent; after all, I was the expert on it, right?  Not only that, because I was both a nanny and a parent at the same time, I had a direct comparison of the perfect nanny vs. the crappy mom on a fairly regular basis.

For example:  one day, I was taking one of my girls to a violin lesson.  She was running late, but I was my usual patient and understanding self.  When we finally got into the car to leave, she said, "If my mom was taking me and we were this late, she'd be freaking out."  I said, "If you were my kid and we were this late, I'd be freaking out."

I realized in that moment that I didn't have the fun, relaxed, easy relationship that I have with my nanny kids with my own children, and it saddened me to no end.  I've never once yelled at 'my big girls' - not once!  Not just because it would be entirely unprofessional, but because I never felt the kind of pressure with them that I feel with my own children.  I never felt as though I should be doing something else when I was caring for my nanny kids; time with them was not only permitted, it was expected.  The quality of the time we spent together was valued far more than my time spent doing anything else; yet it is almost reversed in my role as a parent, and I'm not sure why.

As high of standards as I held myself to as a nanny, it doesn't come close to my expectations of myself as a mother.  These expectations, of course, are completely unrealistic but, when I'm overwhelmed, I seem to forget that too easily.  When I lose my patience with my kids, more often than not, it's really myself that I've lost patience with, but I transfer it to them.  As I'm yelling about being late again because they don't listen, inside I know that what I'm really angry about is that I didn't make enough time for them, but instead gave my time to another project that, in truth, doesn't mean anywhere near as much to me.  What I'm really angry about is that I failed again - but not just because I failed to make enough time for my kids, but because I allowed myself to believe, yet again, that being a mother was not enough.

Reading this post on Hands Free Mama was a great reminder to cut myself some slack; to pare down my to-do list so that I'm not pulled in so many directions at once; to slow down and to allow myself to let go of my guilt and the false pretense of parenting that I've subjected myself to.   Making time for myself and my children should be my first priority; it's the best thing I can do for my kids.