Happy Birthday
I love you, Bascha. Thank you for spending your life with me. To me you are rainbows and ocean breezes, sunsets and a warm bed.
I love you, Bascha. Thank you for spending your life with me. To me you are rainbows and ocean breezes, sunsets and a warm bed.
I am not sure how to start except to say I’m kind of flabbergasted. A switch in Lucas’s mind flipped this week; or perhaps someone installed new drivers overnight. I’m pretty sure that now, just about a month before his half birthday, we are seeing the first signs of the 9 year change.
This in itself isn’t unexpected. (We were given a handout by Lucas’s teacher last spring when many of his older classmates were already going through it.)
Nor is the timing particularly surprising now that I think about it further. For me, this time around the autumn equinox is always rife (fetid?) with turmoil and change. I’ve written about this before, particularly in the context of the Waldorf myth of St. Michael, whose festival we’ll be celebrating this year on October 1 at school.
So it’s the time of year to excavate and uncover, to face our dragons and look at life and ourselves with new eyes, to ask ourselves if we like what we see, or if it’s time to take our swords and cut away the elements that are no longer serving us, that keep us from feeling right in the world. These challenges are opportunities, right? They help us grow.
This year I’m reflecting on Lucas’s dragons, for I feel he has his own now. His dreamy innocence is falling off him, little by little. His mind is sharp and becoming more critical by the day. He is now becoming an individual who is finally all the way in the world and looking about. He won’t like everything he sees. He won’t like everything he is.
This change of consciousness during the ninth year is challenging for child and parent alike, I am told. The payoff is that this is how a child naturally separates himself from his parents and develops his own individual character. It’s part of his learning to think critically, make choices, and become his own person—all fantastic stuff!
Admittedly, it is somewhat alarming to hear his brand-new self-loathing: “I hate myself. I’m the dumbest! I shouldn’t even exist!” His criticism should fall squarely on his parents before too long.
Really, this is just the beginning of a phase that we all have to get through, and who knows what will happen. I would not have guessed that one of his first declarations of independence would be to “challenge himself” to stay awake the whole night last night!
Lucas came to tell us several times (10 p.m., 11:15 p.m.) that he couldn’t sleep. We gently but firmly sent him back to bed with an extra hug and the advice that one cannot fall asleep if one doesn’t still one’s body. We went to sleep. Asher, who is sick and was barking and coughing, woke up around 2:30 needing a drink of water. When I took Asher back to bed, I realized that Lucas wasn’t in his bed. He wasn’t in Asher’s bed either. (I’m not the sharpest at 2:30 a.m. so I was confused.) Then I started to get scared and went looking through the house for Lucas. I found him asleep in the comfy armchair in the living room. I tried to slow my pounding heart and ultimately decided to leave him asleep in the chair. I went back to bed myself but had trouble going back to sleep. I kept worrying about him, wondering what he had on his mind that had caused his insomnia. What nightmare did he have that drove him from his bed? Oh, we weren’t gentle enough with him when he told us he couldn’t sleep earlier, and he was too afraid of our wrath to come to us when he needed us!
Nope. None of that. This morning he revealed he had deliberately tried to stay awake all night. He had played while the rest of us slept. He had spent a bunch of time finger-knitting a long rope. Ian and I sipped our morning coffee and tried to figure out which part of Lucas’s story was the lie. We told him that he isn’t to do that anymore: When we put him in bed for the night, we expect him to stay there! (I guess I should be glad that he didn’t leave the house!)
Natural consequences are tough. He was TIRED today at school. And bedtime came mighty early tonight.
Here is my electroluminescent wire (EL wire) coat for Burning Man. My talented husband made it for me. I asked for flowers and I absolutely love it! Ian is the BEST! (Thanks also go to E for giving me the coat several years ago.) We are going to be the glowingest family of four on the playa this year.
Inspired by SouleMama {this moment} – A Friday ritual. A single photo – no words – capturing a moment from the week. A simple, special, extraordinary moment. A moment I want to pause, savor and remember.
Oh Seattle!
Ian and I took a three-day trip to Seattle, Washington to celebrate our 15th anniversary. We had an amazing time together, which was a wonderful balance of spending time alone and spending time with darling friends whom we don’t often see. We were treated to drinks and Seattle-brewed beer, attended a “babycue” (baby shower/BBQ for expecting friends), and got a marvelous driving tour around Seattle, featuring a walk through the arboretum, visits to Gasworks Park and the working locks, and a photo shoot with the Fremont Troll. Saturday featured glorious weather and it was perfect for such site-seeing. We waked our legs off all throughout the downtown area to Pioneer Square, along the waterfront to the Olympic Sculpture Park and past the Space Needle and the EMP/Science Fiction Museum. We visited the renowned Pesos for breakfast with friends and had a romantic, delicious dinner for two at the Palace Kitchen, where we didn’t even get off the appetizer menu. We received two passes to the Seattle Art Museum and spent two lovely hours with friends there; Ian really enjoyed the Andy Warhol film and photo exhibit and the Kurt Cobain exhibit. I took pictures of nearly everything, but not enough of the beautiful people we spent time with. Our room at the Hotel Max was terrific and very comfortable, especially after they moved us up to the tenth floor to a room with a downtown view, and I’d recommend it if you’re hankering for some modern decor and really comfy pillows. It rained on us just enough to be authentically Seattle, but not enough to hinder our adventures in any way.
M and J took us to a gorgeous overlook in a ritzy neighborhood on a hill above Seattle—sorry, I forgot the name.
Park mosaic table top near the Seattle Space Needle.
Sculpture detail. This is fairly near the Needle.
I was really impressed with the beautiful hanging baskets of flowers and garden planters all over the downtown area. Everything was clean and beautifully maintained. Even the manhole covers were artistic.
This is the nighttime view from our hotel. Pretty!
Irises at the Olympic Sculpture Park—there were so many and they were so beautiful; I liked them more than the sculptures.
Part of the amazing Experience Music Project/Science Fiction Museum building. I think it’s a little schizo. We didn’t go inside this trip, but I know we will someday. I loved, loved, loved the reflective skin and shapes of this building.
Here’s Ian being handsome on the waterfront near the Sculpture Park.
We love exploring places, love walking and walking and walking together. It’s been a really long time since we had the luxury of doing this, just the two of us. Everything I saw was beautiful because I was with my love.
Many, many thanks to our generous friends for showing us a fabulous time!
Happy 15th Anniversary to the man who has filled my life with love, laughter, sensation, little boys, and most recently, rainbows.
Today is my birthday. I’m 38 today, although last year my husband advertised my birthday as my 25th, so maybe this is my 26th? I can live with either, really.
During my 26th year, I was married to the man of my dreams, building life-long friendships, living a mostly carefree, earnest life, and working hard to make it in the world. It was a good year full of good times and good goals. We were building careers. We were saving all the money we could to buy a home together. We were talking about having children.
Yesterday as I was walking home after having dropped Asher off at his preschool, I had a few minutes to reflect on my life. It’s easier to think about such things when the ambient sounds are birdsong instead of little-boy laser-battle sound effects.
Wow. I am really fortunate and REALLY happy!
I don’t always feel happy. Small and big things get me down. I worry. I have anxiety and frustrations and limits that I strain against very often. Sometimes this coat of motherhood that I put on eight years ago feels itchy and too tight in places. Sometimes I get hot under the collar. These feelings I experience are all true, valid, and real.
But what a life we have made for ourselves! For instance, I have time to walk my 3-year-old to school in the morning. I can pick my 8-year-old up from school in the afternoon. I have the freedom to accept the work I want, and most of the time I can turn down the work I don’t want. I haven’t sat in a cubicle for six years. When my young son isn’t with me, he is with his father, a grandmother, or our dear friends of twenty years. Lucas goes to an amazing school, where he is learning every day. I have hobbies now that I never dreamed I’d have, and a garden full of green, growing friends. I’m learning to make things with my hands. I’m developing new interests and skills all the time. Our children are healthy, smart, and vital. We enjoy our family time together. I have talented, loving, patient friends. I’m profoundly in love with my husband and he with me.
It’s a rich and vibrant life and I’m so grateful. I think 38 is just fine.
I
It starts with a bed-a-bye snuggle, sometime before the morning music …
somehow, there we all are.
Four abed, snuggled under, breathing.
Daddy’s the bravest. He rises before the rest.
Then mama feels guilty, smells coffee brewing, and slowly emerges from the nest.
Big boy bounces up, right up!
Mama and big boy go to his room to pull out clothes for today’s many adventures.
“But I’m not ready!” he complains.
(Mama doesn’t blame him. She’s not ready either.)
So they sit together on the green carpet. Perhaps a cuddle?
Arms enfold ten wiggly elbows, ten knocking knees.
“Either this lap used to be bigger, or you used to be smaller.”
(Giggle)
And there she is, just an arm’s length away,
Emily Mouse, doing her “evening” chores, having a before-bed drink
of water from the upside-down blue bottle.
Gently, Mama says, “Maybe Emily misses you,” thinking, it has been a good long while
since you held your mousie friend.
OK. He reaches for her, cups her gently in two astonishingly large hands
lined and crackled with dirt,
graced with broken nails
and calluses—
curious hands
that move a bit too fast.
White mouse whiskers, sniffing, twitching.
“Wow,” mama says. “We have had Emily for a whole year.”
“Yep.” White mouse moves over dingy T-shirt,
is corralled back into workaday hands.
To herself, Gently now … careful …
“How long do mice live?” Mama wonders cautiously.
“Two years, or a little more.”
Hmmm …
Emily’s fur is stroked, ears scratched by one nubby index finger.
Even. More. Gently …
“What do you think that means?”
…
Blue eyes flash, then seek refuge in the green carpet.
She will die someday. Sometime.
“Maybe soon.”
“Let’s give her lots of love until then, OK?”
“Yeah, Mom.”
“And lots of petting. And kitchen scraps!”
“Yeah! I wonder if we gave her a whole sweet pepper, would she eat a hole and crawl inside it?”
“I don’t know. Let’s give her one and see.”
Eggs are ready. “Time for breakfast,” says the Daddy.
Littlest boy sleeps on …
…
II
Lucas and Grandma leave.
Existential dilemma faced and dressing for a rainy school day accomplished!
Phew!
Mama sips coffee
until …
“MAMA!”
Sleepy one emerges into a quiet house.
“My jammies are wet. I want a kiwi.”
Never before. “A kiwi? Really?”
“Yes.”
Well, then. Diaper change and then Mama goes looking …
Hallelujah! A kiwi. One.
“I have to peel the fuzzy brown skin off.”
“And then I eat it up.”
It vanishes before Mama’s eyes. Three gulps tops.
Then the cold eggs follow.
Mama sits by his side.
“I’m ready for some holding now,” he says with certain faith, and climbs over.
A small egg fills her lap.
“I’m a baby bird in my egg.”
Ah. “And I’m the nest?”
“Yes. And the Mama Bird.”
Pecking. Peck. Peck.
“I’m pecking!
“I’m hatching! Hatch!”
“Hello, Baby Bird! Welcome.”
“You’re my Mama Bird?!”
“Mmmm-hmm …”
“I hatch again!”
(Repeat)
“Are you ready to fly, baby bird?”
“Yes!”
“Let’s put on your red rain feathers.”
“Hurry, Mama Bird! Let’s fly!”
All the way to preschool.