Tuesday, June 29, 2010

Vintage Fun





I love the book "Mitten Strings for God" by Katrina Kenison. It's about slowing down, scheduling empty afternoons and creating close, meaningful relationships with our little people. She tells a story of 'the breakfast tree', which was a tree that she and her mom sat in one morning with a breakfast picnic to welcome the day together. " ...we both recall the magic of that morning, how lovely it was. Over the years, I've come to think of the breakfast tree as a symbol of my childhood and of what I loved most about being a child-the kind of casual, daily intimacy with nature that was simply a way of life, a way of life that I took wholly for granted then and for which I am deeply grateful now. I suspect the breakfast tree symbolized something for my mother, too-it was a point of entry into my child's world, a place where a busy mother and a little girl once took in the world's wonders together, in a spirit of shared adventure and discovery."
Lately in these less-scheduled summer days I feel like there's a simplicity (not necessarily ease) to what my kids like to do best with their days- they tend to be happiest when they're given the ability to access discovery, adventure, and a type of magic that comes with all that. It's typically old fashioned fun without the help of technology, and it takes a bit of time, planning and focus on my part, but then again, just like the breakfast tree, I'm a part of the adventure, at least peripherally as I supply the location or the supplies, and the support. It's been having a picnic behind the piano, floating paper boats down a creek, capturing tadpoles, climbing trees, rolling down hills, pumping on a swing, picking up ants... I don't believe there are a shortage of moms who frown upon these things- ants might bite, or the creek could be contaminated, or you can get sap on yourself or slip out of the tree... All of this could be true. But I think most of the time these risks are hugely overblown; I encourage my kids to sample the world, to feel it on their fingers and breathe it into their bodies and experience it all of their own making. It's finding the wonder and beauty of simple things with my kids. I love it!



Summer is the best time to do it too, although if I get creative, there are opportunities inside and outside at any time of year. I love to take advantage of big swaths of parks with trees, hills, or even a creek because the boys could really just spend all day exploring it. When I slow down and do it with them, I can't deny that it's really special for me too.



"Suddenly, I realized, we truly did have something to celebrate: the joy of real togetherness."-Katrina Kenison
ps. I don't think it would be honest to give the impression that I've been feeling as calm and collected as this post may come across- this week has been particularly hairy, but I do like to focus on the calmness I feel when we're climbing trees or rolling down hills...

Monday, June 21, 2010

New York, I Love You



"Well, the flight is full." The stewardess who uttered these horrible words offered no pity, no sympathy, no understanding of what it had taken for us to get to this ticket counter. It seriously took everything that I had not to burst into tears right before her uncaring, pursed lips. But if I was honest, I can't say I was surprised. The whole trip to New York always seemed like it wasn't really going to happen. Hoop after hoop had to be cleared well before we ever stepped on a plane. First we had to "see about" our buddy passes from a very gracious friend, then we had to pack everybody and everybody's shirts, shorts, socks, shoes, diapers, wipes, sippy cups, toys and drive 6+ hairy hours to Grandma's house. Then Ian had to work remotely for a few days so the little guys could get used to things on site and quit keeping everybody up all night when we, er, abandoned them. Then Grandma and the aunties would be in charge of our four under four for four days, a feat that undoubtedly would be the hugest favour in the world except that Ian and I have to do it everyday and we just wanted to celebrate our 12-year anniversary with a special trip
(even still, it was a huge favour!). So while we were exhausting ourselves flying all day Thursday, flying back Sunday and then driving 6 hours back to LA, we were supposed to be having a good time. Yes, it really did seem like somehow, this was not going to happen. And maybe that was a good thing.
The day before Ian had sat me down and said that it might just be too stressful for us. And too glitchey. Why didn't we just call the whole thing off and drive up to a nice little place around San Francisco where we could get some sleep? After all, wouldn't it be best to rest, and, as Ian's Grandpa put it, New York isn't exactly a "sleepy little town." I wavered, I came close to relenting... why did I insist teetering us on these ledges of craziness? Who in their right minds would be doing all this to fly across the country for, like 2 days when it really came down to it? I had justified the trip in my mind because we were flying on buddy passes and we had a free hotel night we were using, but on the other hand that kind of travel is glitchy. Maybe the risk wasn't worth it... what if it totally backfired and we got stuck somewhere, or the kids were too much to handle and we couldn't get home? Maybe... hmm...
But then I got a funny feeling that we needed to go for it. Life was short. We may never get back to NYC for years and years, we didn't call on family too often the way every other 2x2 mom I know does, and whatever happened, just being together would be fun. Nobody was talking me off this ledge.
I was regretting all of that big time when we got to the airport and found out that the flight load, which our buddy pass benefactor told us looked "fine" the day before, was full- 149 seats were gone out of 150, and there were 3 standby passengers ahead of us. I ran to the phone to cancel our hotel, only to find that we would have to pay $509 for our "free" night, way more than it was actually worth, if we didn't show up, and the'd also charge us for the second night.
Again, it was all I could do not to burst into tears.
The best part of the trip happened right there when Ian just smiled at me. He didn't get mad, he didn't say "I told you so", he didn't even sigh or roll his eyes. He just smiled and said "let's go for it, whatever happens, we'll be together." He knew how much I wanted to go to New York, how hard it was for me to leave all those years ago, and how much I had been looking forward to our trip. So he just went with it. I know it wasn't easy for him to look so positive. And I have never loved him quite the way I did right then.
As we waited to get onto the flight to JFK and I saw how crowded the gate was, I just knew we weren't getting on, but I said a fervent little prayer that we would. In the grand scheme of things this was a pretty ridiculous request, but if there was any possible way we could get to New York so that we could have a wonderful time together and strengthen our marriage and make some good memories, to please please please let it happen.
As we sat watching the hoard board my heart was simultaenously sinking and pounding so loudly I was pretty sure everyone could hear it. Just before the desk closed the stewardess said that we did have a chance. PLEASE! I thought. PLEASE!!! NOBODY ELSE MAKE IT!! And, then, suddenly, moments before we were supposed to take off... she handed us tickets. And not even two middle seats at the back, these were two seats right next to each other at the front! One of the other standbys had canceled and another crew member had switched his seat so we could sit together.
I felt like we were walking on the clouds. By some miraculous miracle, we were going to be going to New York after all.
That turned out to be just the beginning. Our trip was perfection itself of an embarrassing variety. We didn't have any ugly run-ins that are so typical of this aggressive, type-A city. In fact, we kept noticing kind deeds- a group of people scrambling to help someone with their suitcases on the air train, a man in a hurry stopping to help a young mother with her stroller off Prince Street, some people helping someone with their crutches by Washington Square. And everywhere we ate was the best food we had eaten in ages. We started laughing about how it got to the point where we'd just be meandering around and turn a corner thinking oh, what's here? Oh, something else that's going to blow my mind. We'd hit the most outstanding chocolate shop or pizza parlour or cupcake bakery. Everything was amazing. Including the weather.


June is typically a cloud of humidity, but our days were perfect. Unbelievable. Sunny and a little warm with a baby breeze. And our trip was the best kind, we didn't do any of the 'big' things, like climb the Statue of Liberty or do the Empire State Buildiing, we just soaked in all the little things that make New York what it is. I sighed in deep comfort at the unique, musical little squeal of the subway train as it was pulling out of the platform. I never noticed how much I missed it. I loved seeing the kid with the white-boy fro who set up shop on the Brooklyn bridge, typewritter in lap and a cardboard sign saying POEMS FOR SALE taped to his stomach. I would have loved one of his typed poems, but a crowd of people beat me to it so Ian and I made up our own poems, his were so

good I thought he had gotten them from somewhere else.
I loved the amazing pizza we tried at 'KESTE' which means 'THIS IS IT' in Italian, and how all the people who served us were authentic Italians who spoke Italian to us like of course we'd be Italian too, and the crisp crust that gave way to chewy softness inside and ooey gooey cheese that tasted like the mushrooms it was paired with. And how we wandered into a cafe when the US vs. Slovenia World Cup game was on and the emotion of the crowd took us into its embrace as they went crazy for the 2nd goal and wept with despair at the robbery of the third goal and how instantly we were a part of things. Even wandering through Dean and Deluca and laughing at the $170/lb Waygu was such fun. Everywhere hydrangeas were blooming, sending their sweetly invisible scent in the air and all the people in all the parks were talking earnestly about their relationships, and we were strolling around, hand in hand.

On Saturday afternoon we went to an old favorite, Doughnut Plant, in the lower east side and got lavender, blueberry, tres leches, and peanut butter-glaze & blackberry-jam filled doughnuts with blueberry lemonade on the side and took a taxi up to the Bethesda fountain in Central Park for an impromptu picnic, driving past all the crazy places I used to work and laughing at all the crazy people I used to work with.


We drove past the building where I was when I watched the towers fall, and the building where I got my first paycheck in New York and sang "if you can make it here..." and we went to the bridge by the Dakota where we got pictures taken a million years ago when we were young and just starting law school and Ian still had most of his hair.
It just felt like the city was unbelievably generous to us. Strangers offerred us unsolicited subway information that saved our skins, lines to amazing restaurants weren't too long, the return flight was perfect, although after that first scare we cut our trip short a day so we could get onto a less crowded one, the "free" hotel night really did not charge us one penny, and every single minute was colourful, amazing, and precious. I do miss New York, after all these years I can't believe how instantly I felt at home again, but I'm inexplicably glad we're not living there. With our 2x2 situation it would be quite horrendous. But I'm so grateful that I do have a little bit of crazy ledge-jumping in me, and most of all that I have a husband who, when the moment is right, totally goes along with it. Also, amazing family in Sacramento who kindly and graciously watched our little guys so well and so uncomplainingly everyone was happy and safe and had no desire to return home. I'm glad we went. Somehow, this time, everything did work out.

The temple was amazing. We lived through all the renos but moved right before it was finished.


Sunday, June 13, 2010

Where on Earth did the Year Go?- Joy School Graduation


Did an entire school year really just go by? It's hard for me to believe that our lessons from Joy School about how wonderful the earth is, the difference between 'healthy' food and 'sometimes' food, making Jack-o-lanterns while talking about feelings, and filling in a goal chart for each time Julian played nicely with his brothers were not just a couple weeks ago.
This has definitely been one of my happiest 'years'. (I'm talking school years here since so many endings and beginnings seem to occur in the June/September vicinity) I can't say I necessarily accomplished the most, but it was pretty happy. Having so many little kids at home is chaotic and frustrating at times, but I also realized this year how much fun it really can be. Caleb and Julian were finally cleared from having to go to so many doctors appointments and therapy visits and our days were free to explore LA, go to Disneyland, run in the grass, swing at the park, meet with friends, and do Joy School.

Joy School, for anyone who has no idea what I'm talking about, is a co-op preschool where moms take turns teaching all the kids in the group in their home. The lesson plans, which are pulled off a website usually the night before we're supposed to teach, are a little different from other preschools because they doesn't touch on letters or academic things. Each unit is about joy concepts like the Joy of the Earth, the Joy of Sharing and Service, Setting Goals, Being Curious, etc. Reading the book 'Teaching Your Children Joy' while teaching the units turned it into a parenting tool that helped me understand what my children are going through better and appreciate this chapter of life more fully (ie. at all ;). The Curiosity unit therapeutically helped me see Caleb's mixture experiments and the disapperance of an entire quart of extra virgin olive oil as an expression of curiosity, not just an attempt to make my life miserable. The unit on Goal setting showed me that my kids could actually work towards a goal, for example they can get themselves dressed and make their beds after breakfast in the morning, which they actually and surprisingly do quite consistently.
One of the best parts about Joy School was the families we did it with. By great good luck we all lived in a 4 or 5 block radius and the ability to walk to 'school' was awesome. The other moms are some of the most fabulous people in my life and it was a huge blessing to be a bigger part of each other's child-raising experiences. Also, they were kind enough not to make me teach doubletime since I had twins, which was a big sacrifice and something they always poo-pooed and never made me feel bad about whenever I expressed thanks. Finally, I have developed such a soft spot for the three other little boys in our group. It has been such a treat to watch their little personalities develop and see how different they are. I will always have a special place in my heart for them and enjoy keeping tabs on how they do as they all grow up.

At the graduation we had a slideshow of all the photos of the year- it was neat to see how much they'd grown and remember things like the Daddy-Day campout trip where all the dads took the kids camping and they even wound up on the local news... I know they're still young, a year away from kindgergarten, but it's going by fast so I threw in a song at the end that I edited a little called 'Blessed Be': "So dream on sweet dreams tonight, and we'll dream too of a future clean and bright. Dream on, soon you'll be Standing tall and free- Oh blessed be the hopes and dreams of our Baby."

Next year our group be all over the country and the world and Joy School as we knew it this past year will be no more. But I'm so grateful it worked out the way that it did and who knows?? Maybe next year will hold something even better in its own unique way. We'll just have to see...
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