Filed under Parenting

PSA: Look Right

One day when I was in 8th grade, I returned home from my afterschool activities to tragic news. A 6th grader at my school had been killed riding her bike home earlier that afternoon.

I walked across my quiet residential street, to the place where she died – less than a block from her house. I looked at the makeshift shrine that was beginning to build. Her blood stained the street.

She had been riding her bike in the bike lane but she was going against traffic. According to reports, the driver who struck her had pulled up to a sleepy intersection and stopped at the stop sign. She looked to her left and, seeing no cars coming her way, she turned right. Right into that young girl. She wasn’t driving fast. She wasn’t drunk. She just made a simple, but deadly, mistake.

It was an accident. A tragic accident.

Every morning, I pull out of my driveway with my own precious cargo in tow. I see the children in our neighborhood walking and biking down our street to school. I creep to the end of my street and stop. I look left. I see no cars coming.

And then I look right. I imagine what it must have been like for that poor girl in the last moment of her life. I imagine what it must have been like for her friend who had split off from her just a block earlier and who, years later, told me she heard her friend scream but didn’t realize until later what exactly it was that she was hearing. I imagine what it must have been like for the girl’s mom who, I heard, was so heartbroken she moved away from the home they had once shared.

When you come up to an intersection. Please stop. Fully. Please look to both your left and your right. Please do your part to prevent something like this from happening to another family.

I’ve Felt the Calm of A Satisfied Soul

It’s been a busy week around these here parts. First week of school and all. Here are some of the things that have satisfied my soul of late:

  • Sometimes not having all the answers really sucks.
  • Talking about death and dying with kids is never fun. Especially when it feels like it may be close. Or far. Or…who knows. But it’s important to talk about it nonetheless.
  • There’s a lot of great things that come with being a parent but one of the greatest is when your kids show absolutely no resemblance to you. See also: Five nights away from home with no homesickness and no fear of waterslides.
  • “No resemblance” corollary: When it takes 31 years and one kid who asks to get on a waterslide? And enjoy it? Awesome.
  • Waterslide corollary: Going on a family date to a place you and your husband have never been even though you’ve known each other forever? Also awesome.
  • There is little more liberating to a woman than to walk around in a bathing suit in public without caring about what others might think.
  • Ends up, this confidence despite evidence to the contrary thing is genetic.
  • See also: A six-year-old who doesn’t really think he needs to go by his new classroom to meet his teacher until the first day of school because really, mom, it’s not much different from last year.
  • Mom feels better when you make him go anyway.
  • It appears as though each added year of dropping my oldest off on the first day of school allows me to get a little further away from the building before breaking down into complete tears.
  • Having the youngest beg to go to kindergarten doesn’t help. Nor does knowing you’re planning on holding him back for another year when you’re pretty sure he’d be just fine if he went on time.
  • That knot in your throat when your kid says he can get to his classroom all by himself isn’t because you’re concerned he can’t. It’s because you know he can.
  • No matter how hard I try, I always say too much when I’m nervous.
  • Traditions matter. Especially those like taking the day before the first day of school off and working from home on the first day so you can be there when the bell rings. If there was a single piece of advice I could give working parents new to the whole school thing it’d be to warn them that EVERY. OTHER. PARENT. will be there to pick up their kids’ on the first day. If you’re not, your kid will, in fact, be the only one whose parent isn’t.
  • MMS picture spam may or may not be appropriate when you don’t post pictures of your kids online. But if you got a “Happy 1st day of School” text from me and didn’t want one, please feel free to let me know. I swear I only sent it to people I thought would appreciate it. And if I thought you would, and you didn’t, I’m so sorry. I guess, I don’t know, maybe we need to go to relationship counseling or something, because we obviously aren’t on the same page. HA!
  • Whether at soccer practice, a birthday party or a parent meeting, the following this are assured to happen: A parent will tell you more about them and their marriage than you ever want to know, a parent will make it clear their kid is above yours, a parent will make it clear their kids is below yours, a parent will disappear and you’ll judge them for not being involved, you’ll need to run somewhere and be judged for not being involved, and a whole bunch of other things. It’s important to remember that as much as you love/hate a certain parent, there are other parents that love/hate you. Oh well. It happens.
  • Every woman needs a few good girlfriends.
  • There is a great joy that comes with finding out that you’ve found yours.

My Front Porch Looking In

I got home last night to my boys asleep in the middle of my bed. DJ was on “my side,” Bop on Scoot’s. Scoot told me DJ had convinced his little brother that Bop really should sleep on daddy’s side. DJ understood that mommy was coming home while he slept.

Big brothers are always a little shady like that.

He managed to open his eyes enough to know I was there. He slept with his arm across me, then early in the morning he held me in both.

After Scoot left this morning, I switched sides of the bed. When Bop started to stir, I whispered in his ear, “B-Bop, mommy’s home.” A huge grin crossed his face. He grabbed me tightly around my neck. Then gave me a kiss. Then another. Then more. He asked if I went on an airplane. Then started to complain about his ear draining. One of them always gets sick when I travel.

It was great to have time away, to hang out with friends and meet new ones. To laugh and joke and explore and learn. To hear how others see the world.

I enjoyed seeing the sights in the Big Apple, but the city that never sleeps has nothing on what I get to wake up to every morning.

(Not) Holding Out For A Hero

A few *cough* of you have noticed I’ve been AWOL from the world of social media recently. (Katie, I’m glad you don’t have to look up what this means anymore.) See, as it ends up, I may be willing to tell the world about my problems but I’m not so into sharing those of others. In vaguely general terms, someone who is close to me has been going through a trying time medically speaking and I have been doing what I can for my family to be there, both physically and emotionally and frankly, it’s been draining. (Many, many thanks to those of you who have been around to help out, both IRL and virtually.)

Though the past month has been a bit rough, it’s also demonstrated yet again why I am absolutely, 100 percently, with all of my heart devoted to Scoot, my very own super hero. People who know us see him as an introvert and me as an extrovert and think we get along because opposites attract. What they don’t realize is all the weird ways we’re alike as well. One of those is in how we deal with hardship.

See, we both become slightly obsessive…and during this last month that’s played out by us painting and decorating the upper floor of our house. It’s bizarre sounding, I’m sure, but bottom line is that painting into the weeeeeeeee hours of the morn’ allowed us to spend time having some difficult, but important, conversations.

We took this time to paint our bedroom (in celebration of our anniversary), Bop’s room (that we never use because he sleeps with DJ), and the playroom (which is now, 100% BOY). The theme of this room was born when DJ said he wanted it to be red. Of course we wouldn’t paint the whole room red, especially because two of the walls can be seen in our very open floor plan from our stairs, bedroom and hallway. We made a compromise: mommy got to pick the color on those two walls, DJ got his red wall and we settled on blue for final wall. With colors like that, what theme would work better than a super heroes one?

The Back Wall

(I’ve made my mom promise to sew covers for the pillows that are *supposed* to be on this couch to represent their five favorite super heroes)

The Window Wall

This is hands down my favorite part of the room, because really, what good is it to teach a young boy to admire a super hero without empowering him to become one on his own? (Vinyl lettering courtesy of It’s Written on the Wall on Etsy. It was originally designed in a rectangle shape but I was able to cut the words apart to make a single line.)

That desk holds the boys’ new netbook that I referenced in my last post. I’m planning on getting some shelves from Ikea to go over the desk to hold the workbooks that they love to do and some pens/pencils/markers. (BTW, if you’re wondering, those bodies hanging on the wall are outlines made in 2007 at DJ and Bop’s daycare…they’re a bit bigger now…heh.)

The TV Wall

We got these vinyl super heroes from Roommates Peel and Stick Decor. They were half the price of a Fathead and are a nice, thick vinyl that sticks well. (Please don’t comment on how Wolverine could really be moved up and to the left a smidge…I know…my OCD side is already obsessing about it and I’m pretty sure it will win out before day’s end.)

The Hidden Wall

My boys don’t understand that there’s a difference between Marvel and DC Comics and as a die-hard Batman fan, that breaks my heart. But, this isn’t my playroom, it’s theirs, so we tried to balance the two as much as possible. Also…you see that red wall? That was created with ONE COAT of Behr’s Primer + Paint. Seriously…we bought this because the woman working at the Home Depot paint counter lamented with us on a previous visit how much it sucks to paint a wall red (we’ve done it before…it took FOUR coats). We had her color-match the Martha Stewart Living color we had chosen (this wall is Maine Lobster, the other two are Yellow Magnolia and Azurite). One coat. That’s it. I’m still amazed.

We may have a weird way of dealing with difficult times but hey, at least our kids get a cool playroom out of it, right?

Three Fathers

You are my father. You held me on your lap as you finished your thesis. You brushed my teeth at night. You taught me to catch a fly ball and mow a lawn. You coached my soccer team. You told me a man should appreciate my curves. You walked me down the aisle. You placed your hands over my boys’ heads and let them know they’re loved. You are everything a father and grandfather should be.

You are my godfather and father-in-law. You taught me to love my heavenly father as much as my earthly one. You lent me your car. You lent me your ear. You asked “Who is this little girl wearing my son’s jersey?” You taught me to grow from that little girl to a woman, a wife, a mother, a Christian. You trusted me with your baby boy. You work hard to give my boys the same opportunities you gave your own. You are everything a godfather, father-in-law and grandfather should be.

You are the father of my children. You are gentle and kind and affectionate and silly. You provide structure and discipline and honesty and love. Every day you teach my boys the three things I cannot: how to be a good man, a good husband, a good father. You are everything a father and a husband should be.

I am so blessed to have so many great fathers in my life. May all of the fathers I know have a very Happy Fathers’ Day.

The Tortoise and The Hare

My dad is a storyteller. He is also a (often bad) comedian. He loves a fable and its moral, a joke and its punchline. He taught me to appreciate both.

Growing up one of my favorite fables he’d tell me was the story of the tortoise and the hare. I retold a version it to Scoot on our first date. We both remember it well.

To this day, some of my favorite sayings are “Slow and steady wins the race,” “Good things come to those who wait,” and “Patience is a virtue.” They’re all variations on a theme.

So often I forget this about parenting. By pretty much all measures, DJ was an easy kid and a predictable learner. He crawled at four months, walked at nine. He learned to talk by-the-books, one syllable at a time. He hit pretty much all the developmental milestones as he should, slowly and steadily.

Bop is an all-at-once type of guy. He crawled late but walked soon thereafter. His first word was not “mama” or “dada” but “bat-eh-bol” (basketball). At 21 months, when I was growing slightly concerned that he was barely saying any words, I took him to a grocery store. As we walked through he was pointing and saying something. It took me two laps around the store to realize he could read and say every aisle number between one and nine. I was so amazed I took a video of me typing numbers into the computer (out of order) and him shouting them out. I then found out he knew them all in Spanish as well as English. I had no idea where it all came from.

He’ll go through what feels like eternity-long phases when he doesn’t change much. Then suddenly, without warning, he’s mastered a new skill (or ten) or developed a new personality trait seemingly overnight. It’s happened again and again.

Last August, the two weeks we spent doing parent-participation swim lessons with him were some of the most agonizing of my parenting career. Bop insisted on me (not daddy) going with him and then refused to do anything he was asked. He didn’t learn much, I was frustrated and Scoot and I both worried that we wasted our money. I was thrilled when the parks and rec department suggested he move up to the older class this year. No parents allowed.

Monday was his first day. He was woefully unprepared. He wanted to stay with DJ. Then he wanted me to go with him. When neither happened, he just stood there, then later he begrudgingly went to the shallow end with his teacher, always just far enough out of her reach that she couldn’t touch him. She finally coaxed him to join her on a ride to the deeper end and he promptly FREAKED. Despite attempts at gently urging him and flat-out bribing him, he was basically kicked out of class on his first day.

[Let me pause here for a moment to make sure I'm not accused of pushing my kids too hard. Swim lessons are unlike any other sport to me. I couldn't care less about him being good enough at swimming to do it competitively. All I care about is that he's safe in and around water. Babies take swim lessons. Certainly my nearly four year old who likes to go to the pool to play and spends all day being instructed by other adults should be able to as well.]

Between Monday and Tuesday, I’d been coaching him to be prepared to go into the water with his teachers (and not mommy and daddy). I’ll admit it, I even bribed him. (Our bribery song this time went, “B-Bop goes swimming in the pool with Ms. Katie, B-Bop gets candy, B-Bop gets candy.” Yet no matter what promises I made him, he repeatedly said “No!” when asked if he was going to go in the pool at his swimming lessons.

I spent all day yesterday fretting. I rushed home from work and put my own bathing suit on under my clothes, convinced he’d get remediated to the parent-participation class full of 18 month olds.

When we got there, I had to get both kids settled at two ends of the pool by myself. I told them to take off their shirts and flip flops. They both did. I was perplexed by Bop’s willingness to do so with just one command but didn’t want to get my hopes up. I decided to get DJ settled and then deal with Bop.

He was a bit shy at first. Instead of sitting with his feet in the pool next to his peers, he sat behind them. The female lead teacher (not Ms. Katie) asked who his teacher was the day before. I told her but added he didn’t do well and wouldn’t stay with her in the water. She instead assigned him to a young man who looks more like a football player than a swimmer.

Scoot and I stood about 6 feet from the pool watching nervously, waiting for him to freak again. Bop kept looking back at us, but instead of reaching for me like he had on Monday, he’d smile and wave.

My hopes rose as the tension in my shoulders dropped.

After about five minutes I was able to go sit on the side with the other parents. Bop was smiling, listening and (are you sitting down for this one?) doing his “kickers!”

I was so proud of him! Afterwards I met his teacher and explained what happened the day before. He said, “No, he did great!”

Bop got his candy and I got what I’ve been waiting a year for: a huge Bop smile, a show of pride in his accomplishment and his enthusiastic head nod when asked if he wants to go back tomorrow.

These times come when parenting. A brief moment to take a deep breath and revel in the successes of your child before they’re off to climb their next mountain.

We’ve been spoiled with DJ. He’s given us these moments slowly and steadily throughout his whole life. We’ve had to invest more in milestones with Bop. But I have to tell you, I’m finally seeing the myriad joys that come with raising both a tortoise and a hare.

Sometimes I Get It Right. (Or Do I?)

Yesterday afternoon, DJ had a play date with his best friend “Adam.” They went to Adam’s soccer practice and then to Chuck E Cheese. The kids were kids and they ate a little, played a lot and took pictures on the little ride-along-side-Chuck-E-car-thingy. The pictures were cute and made it very clear they had a great time. They each brought home five (!?!?!?!) of them.

This morning, DJ came up to me as I was getting ready and asked if he could bring the pictures to school to show his friends. What I wanted to say was “no” and just leave it at that. Instead I put my hairdryer down, sat down and talked with him.

I asked DJ how he would feel if his friend “Jake” went to Chuck E Cheese with Adam instead. How would he feel if they then brought the pictures into class? Would he be happy or sad? Would he feel left out? He said he’d feel sad then asked, “So can I take them?”

Um, that didn’t go exactly how I thought it would.

I responded, “Look, DJ, I’m not going to tell you what to do. You’re a big boy now and you can make this decision on your own. I just hope that you think about how you’ll make your friends feel before you decide.”

I picked up my hairdryer and he walked away. As we left the house, I noticed the pictures, all five of them, were still sitting on the table.

I was proud of him. And perhaps a little proud of myself too. Afterall, I could have just said no and that would be that. Instead, I taught him an important lesson. Woohoo! I’ll be accepting my MOTY award any day now.

But alas, the story continues…

As we were heading to the car I noticed he was carrying an index card and a pencil. I asked what he was writing. He got a coy smile on his face and held up the card so I could see it. At the top it read, “Chuck E Cheese birthday party.” (Note: His birthday isn’t until September.) There were 25, yes that’s right 25!!!!! names of kids he wants to invite on the list.

“And mom, they’re all going to line up and every one is going to take a picture with me and Chuck E.” he said proudly.

*sigh*

Who knew that little lesson on inclusion would end up costing $449.75?

The Three Most Important Rules of Soccer and, Perhaps, Life

When I was a kid, I played soccer at a very competitive level. The girls’ soccer movement was fueled in large part by those of us growing up in and around the best college soccer programs in the country, Stanford included.

Not to sound all egotistical, but I was a leader on my team. Whether it’s because I assumed the role, my coaches pushed it on me or my peers looked to me to step up is irrelevant (though it was probably a little of each).

I had three rules about soccer that I preached to my teammates. They had nothing to do with the strategy or tactics of actual game play, but they were important nonetheless. In fact, I’ve found these rules are applicable to so much of life that I continue to repeat them to myself, my kids and pretty much anyone who will listen.

RULE #1: You have to look good to be good.

Now, I don’t mean this literally but I take this rule quite seriously. The way we present ourselves to the world says a lot about us, both in our own minds and to those we encounter.

On my soccer teams, I was constantly lobbying for the coolest-looking uniforms and warm-ups. Before my team got with the program, I distinctly remember showing up at games and watching the other teams donned in identical warm-up suits that made a symphony of swooshing sounds as 36 legs warmed up in unison for the game. I watched the faces of my teammates as they’d get intimidated by these teams for what reason? Because they were matching?!?! Why did that matter? Well it’s not as silly as it sounds.

Soccer is a team sport. The synchronization of an identically-dressed team says something, perhaps, about their team play, their passing abilities, their chemistry. I quickly became a stickler for how we looked. Jerseys were to be tucked in. Socks folded. Warm-ups on. No random college sweatshirts that messed up our uniformed look. We were a unit. We needed to look like one.

For myself, I always made sure my uniform was clean and ready to go. I’d never wear dirty socks, even if that meant staying up late the night before a game to do laundry or buying a couple extra pairs. I also insisted that my team find a laundromat to wash our uniforms when we had overnight tournaments.

This works. You know it does. When you go to an important meeting, a job interview or a night on the town, I bet you try to wear your favorite power suit or most flattering outfit. When we look good, we are confident. When we are confident, we perform better. Of course that doesn’t mean you’ll win every game or land every job but seriously, how often do you see someone who is dumpy and/or insecure excelling? Yeah, I thought so.

RULE #2: Do not tell me how hard you tried. Show me your socks.

Soccer players are required to wear long socks over their shin guards. Nothing would drive me crazier than playing on a muddy field and seeing a teammate leave the game with clean socks. Really? Seriously? I’m covered from head to toe in mud and your white socks are clean?!?! Get off of my field!

We all go through phases where we’re challenged. I’ve gone through periods when I have had to be up at 5 am for conference calls or work until midnight or later and so have most of the people I’ve worked with over the course of my career. But do not tell me you’re overwhelmed with work when you leave at 5 pm and don’t turn on your Blackberry or laptop until you’re back the next day at 9:30 am. If you’re going through a challenging time, do not even consider complaining to me until you show me your socks.

My dad told me during my first year of “real” work that I should never ask for a promotion until/unless I’ve done the work of the higher position for at least six months. I have to dirty my socks.

RULE #3: If you miss a penalty kick, you didn’t deserve to take it.

Penalty kicks are not particularly common in soccer but they can make all the difference in a game. When, in the event of a tie, a game goes into PKs (5 kicks per team, whoever makes the most wins), one miss can be the difference between winning and losing. It’s one of the few plays where the score and the outcome can be changed by just one player.

A PK favors the kicker. Statistically speaking it should be a gimme. The best goal keepers in the world fail to block PKs all the time. If a kicker doesn’t make it, it’s because the kicker messed up. It’s not because the goalkeeper was just too good.

We all mess up. Sometimes, especially on a team, we deserve to share the blame with or deflect it onto others. But sometimes our mistakes are our own. Sometimes we have no one to blame but ourselves. We would be wise to learn how to tell the difference. When we act like the victims and yet we were the kicker, we lie to ourselves, we lie to our teammates, we weaken ourselves and our team. Sometimes we just need to admit when we didn’t deserve to take the kick.

Puppy Love

As many of you have remarked over the last year of getting to know my family, D is an incredibly sweet little boy. He’s also long had an interest in girls. Not a crazy, sex-driven interest or anything (thank GAWD! he’s only 6!!! 6 1/2!!!). But he’s a romantic, if you will. He talks all the time about wanting to “dance with [so-and-so] when she’s a princess at [their] wedding.” It’s awesome and sweet and naive and, yes, a bit creepy at times.  I mean, seriously, what 6 year old is committed to MARRIAGE?!?!?! Like for reals?!?!?!

Anyhow, D is learning to read and write which means what he used to just say at home is turning into words. On paper. That he gives to these girls. Who bring them home to their parents. Who may or may not appreciate such a thing.

Below is an email I sent to one of those parents today. I’d be really interested in how you’d answer. I don’t want to discourage him from being a gentleman who cares about girls’ feelings and shows them respect and admiration and, yes, chivalry. (He’s been taught to hold the door open for girls. So sue me.) But then again I grew up before having  a pre-pubecent teen snap your bra strap was considered sexual harassment.

* * *

Dear [Dad] and [Mom],

As I’m sure you know, D absolutely adores K. He wrote a book for her (as well as one for another classmate) and really wants to give it to her, but before I let him I wanted to give you a heads up so that it didn’t make you uncomfortable. Let me start off by saying that D is an extremely sensitive kid (not in the crying when people are mean to him kind of way but in the genuinely caring about other people’s feelings kind of way). I’m aware that without knowing him, there’s risk of him coming on a little strong for a kindergartener so I wanted to make sure you were ok with him giving it to her.
 
The book says (and I’m fixing his numerous spelling mistakes here):
 
All of us like you.
Do you like rainbows?
You make my heart proud.
Some people are mean to you.
Some people are nice to you.
We love you K.
 
My apologies if this seems silly to ask. D is our oldest (and we only have boys) so we’re still working through what’s acceptable and what would be seen as strange by other parents. Please let me know if you’d rather him not give it to her and I’ll make sure it disappears. Thanks.
 
Emmie

* * *

So what do you think? Am I being too PC? If K was your daughter, what would you say? I know it’s just puppy love but what if the other parent’s are heebed out by it? Halp!!!!

Curry Celebration

A childhood friend posted as her Facebook status this question: “How long does it take for the smell of curry to get out of your house after you cook it?” I wanted to reply, “With luck, never.”

I decided not to because that response sounds so bizarre. The smell of curry to me, however, makes me as nostalgic for my oldest’s youth as does baby powder or Johnson & Johnson’s baby lotion.

When it neared time for me to return to work after having D, none of the handful of daycare centers we’d toured in downtown DC had openings because of their years-long waiting lists. (Diplotots, the State Department’s daycare center, had a 2 year wait list for the infant room. Pregnancy lasts 9 months, you do the math and tell me how that is logical.) I turned to my employee assistance program and got the name of a number of in-home child care providers and scheduled time to meet them.

We fell in love with the second one we talked to. Her name was Rajwan, but she asked us to call her Raj. She had a graduate degree in early childhood education but immigrated from India and started a daycare in her home when her daughter had a child. Her granddaughter had since grown but she kept up her business.

At the time of our visit she had five other toddlers enrolled. D was the only infant. Her helper watched the older kids and she snuggled D all day long. He was very spoiled.

She’d make herself and her helper curry-flavored foods for lunch every day. Everything of D’s would come home smelling of it: his clothes, car seat, blankets. I wasn’t exactly pleased at first. At the time I wasn’t a huge fan of the spice. But as the weeks passed, it became more than the smell of her lunch on his things. It became the smell of D.

It was the smell I snuggled against as I nursed him, quietly reconnecting after a day apart.

I’ve heard that the part of the brain that processes scent is right next to the part that processes memory. For this, I’m grateful. To this day, the smell of curry reminds me of my sweet little baby D. Once the smell of curry passes my nose, I never want it to leave.

It instantly, emotionally takes me back to D’s infancy and for just a second, I forget about the big boy he’s become. I remember the uncertainty, fear, joy, elation that comes along with being a new mother. I remember the moment I looked into his eyes and committed myself to him. I remember how much he needed me and I him. But just for a second.

Immediately I’m snapped back to the equally as awesome reality of watching him grow from a baby to a boy. And I look forward with excitement and trepidation at watching him grow from a boy to a man.

Tomorrow is D’s Half Birthday (the first we’ve been asked to celebrate). We don’t have plans yet, but I was thinking of maybe making curry.

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