Showing posts with label Parenting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Parenting. Show all posts

Interruptions

3/03/2016
My alarm goes off at 6:00, an intense vibration buzzing against my wrist. I tap it once to stop the buzzing and I roll over, willing myself to get out of bed. For a split second I debate falling back asleep but decide better, swinging my feet towards the ground and walking sleepily into my closet. I quietly pull a long sweater from its perch on a hanger and slip it on. I stuff my phone into my pocket and I tiptoe out of the bedroom and down the stairs.

Relishing in the placidity of the dark, early morning hours when I feel the freedom for a short time from the busyness of life, I turn on the lights in the kitchen and start the coffee maker, letting the rich earthy aroma of the ground beans linger for a moment before sealing the lid over top of the aluminum can and placing it back in the cupboard. I press play on our music speaker where film scores begin playing softly, a composition from Saving Mister Banks humming quietly through the kitchen in a perfect dance to the rhythmic plip-plop of the coffee brewing beside it.

I turn on the computer and let my eyes adjust to the brightness of the screen while double clicking on a brand new notepad document. I sip slowly from the steaming cup in my hands while I watch the curser blinking on the fresh white page, taking a moment to ponder on where I would like to begin, on what words my heart feels like writing this morning.

But then, I never had the chance. Before I could type even one word, as the clock in the bottom corner of my screen flashed 6:15, I heard a little voice squeak a tiny hello from the top of the stairs. I jumped from my chair and walked to the bottom of the stairs to look up, where standing in the darkness was a sleepy-eyed blonde-haired toddler wearing only a diaper, clinging tightly to his well loved green crocheted blanket. Upon seeing me his eyes lit up and a smile spread his chubby cheeks as he reached his hands out wide in his hold me mommy! sign language.

I wanted to be terribly upset that he had ruined my forty-five minutes of peaceful writing time, but instead the sight of his sweet morning face made my heart swell. I scooped him up and kissed his cheek. Good morning baby! I carried him down the stairs and sat him beside me on the couch, where I bypassed my morning quiet time for him. Me with my crossword puzzle, him with his Curious George. Me with my coffee, him with his bottle of milk. I sat on the couch with this beautiful boy of mine and tried not to think too hard about how much I longed for what should have been a lovely morning spent writing and wallowing in the quiet all by myself.

I have had so many moments of interruption lately. I am in the interruption stages of life, I suppose. I have had many moments of toddler melt downs and re-sleep training alongside threats of a very prominent teenager-like attitude that has entered our home so suddenly. I have had many moments that leave me swaying softly, like a sailboat in a windstorm.

This is my life now, I continually remind myself.

Because I have them, my life will never be the same. I am living on their schedule, revolving around their worlds, day in and day out. Even when they aren't with me, they are all that I am thinking about. Whenever they are sick I am taking days off work and nights off sleeping. Whatever stage they are going through, I am stumbling along beside them, trying my hardest to help them through it. There isn't a manual for this gig and every child is so very different that it wouldn't really matter if there were.

Because I have them, my life is changed.

Being a mother is a terrible and beautiful tornado. It is a lifelong meticulous commitment. It is an ocean filled with a contradiction of emotions from exhausting to exhilarating to horrible to beautiful. And it is almost always hard. I wish we as a society were more candid about parenting. I read a book once and although I can't remember the book, I did write down a quote that I found in it which struck me because it was so wonderfully poetic. It said:

"Even I know that being a parent is awful 95% of the time. As far as I can tell, it's that last 5% that keeps the human race from dying out. Four parts blinding terror, one part perfection. It's like mainlining heroine. One taste of life on that edge and you're hooked."

More often than not I lack for sleep, for quiet and alone time. My life isn't my own anymore. My absolute freedom has been replaced by the beautiful beings that are now who I am. In fact, in the large sense of it all, they do define who I am. They aren't all that defines me. I have me for myself, my career, my marriage, my writing, all of my passions and hobbies in life. But I find that I am most largely defined by the two boys that I carried inside of me for nine months each and then brought into the world, the two boys that I have loved wholly and rigorously with all that I am for every single moment since they were born, for who I am absolutely prepared to love wholly and rigorously until the day that I die.

The truth is that I chose this life and I wouldn't have it any other way.

The other day as we were driving into town, a mundane trip to the grocery store on a sappy, sun soaked afternoon, I peeked in the rear-view mirror that was slanted downward to show my crew in the backseat. On either side sat a blonde haired button nosed boy, while in the middle seat sat a beautiful brown eyed Boston Terrier. There they were. My posse. My team. They were all sitting still just then, intently focusing in on the drive ahead of them, and in that moment life felt so unblemished and lovely, so much so that my eyes filled to the brim with tears. It was a perfect moment sandwiched between many hard moments, as most of our days tend to be. I have so many difficult and demanding moments at these young ages that at times I forget how very perfect they really are.

The life of a big crazy family with lots of kids doesn't much appeal to me personally. Me? I crave quiet and peace. I crave the opportunity to take my crew on vacations, on trips and travels that will leave them cultured and show them that this is a very big world that we live in. I crave a life of adventures and financial freedom. I crave the dexterous ability to exercise all of my love and kindness and patience throughout the years as a mother to my boys, and with even two children, pulling off that kind of patience is quite the feat. I have dreams for us.

I feel that perhaps I am in one of the harder stages of parenting life right now at this very moment. I have accepted that fact and past the acceptance I do my best to live in the thick of these years with confidence and dignity. I would like to live these days in awareness while not taking it for granted, because it is hard but it is short and I know very well that time will pass all too quickly. So I am letting the exhaustion and the hard work of parenthood callus my once soft skin, like a farmer who works in the fields from sun up until sun down, and one day I can show the world proudly that I worked so very hard for these calluses.

This parenting gig is so challenging, but even still, I am reminded every day how wonderful a privilege it is to be theirs, and for them to be mine.



"The most terrifying day of your life is the day the first one is born. Your life as you know it is gone, never to return. But they learn how to walk, and they learn how to talk, and you want to be with them. And they turn out to be the most delightful people you will ever meet in your life." 
--Lost In Translation
 



things jace says

10/09/2014

As a parent, with every age your child reaches there are both ups and downs. Every year I sentimentally exclaim, oh this is my favorite age so far! And then the next year comes and I say the same thing. But now that I have two kids, it's more about the comparison of ages. You know, aside from the fact that we could own another HOME with the amount we pay towards daycare for two children, having two is kind of the best.
Have I told you how much easier the second is, by the by? I feel like a pro. I’m not, but I feel like one. I often think about how hard it must be being the oldest! You are the experiment of what not to do and what to do better for the next child. With B I know what to expect, how to really man things like a boss, and I also worry much less this time around. It’s all very nice! I like two. One was fun and three would probably push me over the top, but two...that's the stuff.

Right now, for example, I have moments when I wake up at 4:00 in the morning to feed or when I’m changing an extremely rancid diaper that I think to myself: isn’t it nice that Jace is so independent?! And in the same regards, when Jace sassily talks back to me or when he interrupts mine and dan’s conversations EVERYTIME WE ARE TALKING because CAN’T WE SEE THAT IT’S MUCH MORE IMPORTANT WHAT HE HAS TO SAY, or when he gets his tender feelings hurt by a boy who doesn’t want to play with him anymore and it breaks my mama heart in two, I think to myself: isn’t four months a wonderfully refreshing and easy age?!

The truth is, while both of my boys are growing at an alarming rate, the one I’m having the hardest time with about it all right now is Jace. He lost all of his baby fat. All of it! He’s tall and lanky, he sleeps in his underwear and refuses pajamas, he chooses his own outfits, and he is becoming ever more picky about when he wants to cuddle and give kisses. And it is hard. I see him growing into a boy right in front of my eyes and I can’t stop it. I love the independence, I love that he can tag along with us more and more, that we can teach him things and he can really enjoy all of our adventures. But it is hard. Sometimes I look at him and it’s this sudden shock of, wait, who are you?! It’s scary and emotional and I love him so much I could burst.

Slow down time. Slow the heck down.

BUT ANYWAY.

Jace cracks us up on a daily basis. That’s probably my favorite thing about this age, the funny and random things he comes up with. In fact with all of the attitude that comes along with three years old, THANK THE HEAVENS for all of the funny things he says! They really make up for it. Most of the time. So I try to keep track of them all and my list is too good not to share sometimes. Without further ado, may I present: THINGS JACE SAYS.

(the cleverest of titles, no?)

• “Dees bugs are fighting over dare mom! Hurry! Get dem, dey are fighting!” (I walk over to investigate and he is squatted over a pair of box elder bugs that are mating)(don't worry, I decided he is too young for that talk yet.)
• (pointing at each of my boobs) “You got two babies in dare?”
• (standing inside with his head poked out of the back door and shouting,) “I sorry, you can’t come inside. I sorry! You can’t! You just hafta play outside. I sorry.”
Me: "Who are you talking to baby?"
J: Jus' da wind.
• (while I am playing with Rockie) “Mom. Pweese don’t talk to my dog. Dats MY dog. Pweese don’t talk to huh, okay? And danks.”
• (randomly in the car, after a few minutes of silent driving) “Mom? Member how gwandpa’s not here in our car?”
• Dan: Okkayy buddy, that’s enough soda.
J: (genuinely laughing) Hahaha! You're funny dad!”
• (sees me drinking a glass of water) "What da heck?! You hab waters too? Let’s cheers!” proceeds to hit my cup with his and says, “CHEERS!”
• (Dan drops something on the floor while in the other room and says, “Darn it!”, J comes running into the room) “Knock it off, dad!!”
• (Ingrid Michaelson’s “boys chase girls” comes on the radio) "HEYYY DIS IS MY SONGGGG!”
• (sees a dollar bill on the tv) “Oh look! He got a million dollahs!”

• (walks into the bathroom that still stinks from the previous use) "OH! MY! GOSH!"
• (turns on beck’s swing music which plays a little Mozart ditty) "dats a yoga song. I need to do da yogas.” Proceeds to do handstands and summersaults across the room to the music.
• (a story he told me while driving the other day) “da banana spit on da police man. And he had to take him to jail, but he couldn’t reach him, so da fireman had to get da banana. Da fireman jus reached him and got him, da banana dat spit on da policeman, an he got da banana. da fireman did."
• (whenever he does something that he knows he shouldn’t have done) “pweese don’t be fwustwated mom! jus' be happy!”
• (every morning this week) “I go to school in da mountains today?”



This kid, itellyouwhat.