Sunday, November 27, 2016

October 16 = Duty Day

Zachary had duty today so the kids and I were on our own.  I decided we would all go downstairs and I would read while the kids played.  It kind of worked:








Later, we picked up pizza for the Mids and had one of the squad dinners on campus:



I love pictures of sleeping babies.


Here's the highlights of my reading today:

From a chapter titled "Don't Carpe Diem"

Every time I'm out with my kids, this seems to happen: 

An older woman stops us, puts her hand over her heart and says something like "Oh-- enjoy every moment.  This time goes by so fast."  Everywhere I go, someone is telling me to seize the moment, raise my awareness, be happy, enjoy every second, etc., etc., etc.

I know that this advice comes from a good place and is offered with the very best of intentions.  But I have finally allowed myself to admit that it just doesn't work for me.  It bugs me.  This CARPE DIEM message makes me paranoid and panicky.  Especially during this phase of my life while I'm raising young kids.  Being told in a million different ways that if I'm not in a constant state of profound gratitude and ecstasy, I'm doing something wrong.

I think parenting young children (and old ones too, I've heard) is a little like climbing Mount Everest.  Brave, adventurous souls try it because they've heard there's magic in the climb.  They try because they believe that finishing, or even attempting the climb, is an impressive accomplishment.  They try because during the climb, if they allow themselves to pause and lift their eyes and minds from the pain and drudgery, the views are breathtaking.  They try because even though it hurts and it's hard, there are moments that make it worth the hard.  These moments are so intense and unique that many people who reach the top start planning, almost immediately, to climb again.  Even though any climber will tell you that most of the climb is treacherous, exhausting, killer.  That they cried most of the way up.  And so I think that if there were people stationed, say, every thirty feet along Mount Everest yelling to the climbers "ARE YOU ENJOYING YOURSELF!? IF NOT, YOU SHOULD BE!  ONE DAY YOU'LL BE SORRY YOU DIDN'T!  TRUST US! IT'LL BE OVER TOO SOON!  CARPE DIEM!" those well-meaning nostalgic cheerleaders might be physically thrown from the mountain.

Now I'm not suggesting that the sweet old ladies who tell me to ENJOY MYSELF be thrown from a mountain.  They are wonderful ladies, clearly.  But last week, a woman approached me in the Target line and said the following: "Sugar, I hope you are enjoying this.  I loved every single second of parenting my two girls.  Every single moment.  These days go by so fast."  At that particular point in time, Amma was wearing a bra she had swiped from the cart and sucking a lollipop she undoubtedly found on the ground.  She also had shoplifted clip-on neon feathers stuck in her hair.  She looked exactly like a contestant from Toddlers and Tiaras.  A losing contestant.  I couldn't find Chase anywhere and Tish was sucking the pen on the credit card machine WHILE the woman in front of me was trying to use it.  And so I just looked at the woman, smiled, and said, "Thank you.  Yes.  Me too.  I am enjoying every single moment.  Especially this one.  Yes.  Thank you."

Oh my goodness- this part of the book has changed my life and I couldn't even remember (a month and a half later) where I had read it.

"Clearly, Carpe Diem doesn't work for me. I can't even carpe fifteen minutes in a row, so a whole diem is out of the question.  Here's what does work for me.

There are two different types of time.  Chronos time is what we live in.  It's regular time.  It's one minute at a time.  It's ten excruciating minutes in the Target line time, four screaming minutes in time-out time, two hours until Daddy gets home time.  Chronos is the hard, slow-passing time we parents often live in.

Then there's Kairos-time.  Kairos is God's time.  It's time outside of time.  It's metaphysical time.  Kairos is those magical moments in which time stands still.  I have a few of those moments each day, and I cherish them.  Like when I actually stop what I'm doing and really look at Tish.  I notice how perfectly smooth and brownish her skin is.  I notice the curves or her teeny elf mouth and her almond brown eyes, and I breathe in her soft Tishy smell.  In these moments I see that her mouth is moving, but I can't hear her because all I can think is: This is the first time I've really seen Tish all day and my God- she is so beautiful.  Kairos.

... These Kairos moments leave as fast as they come but I mark them.  I say the word Kairos in my head each time I leave Chronos.  At the end of the day, I don't remember exactly what my Kairos moments were, but I remember I had them.  That makes the pain of the daily parenting climb worth it.  If I had a couple of Kairos moments, I call the day a success.  Carpe a couple of Kairoses a day.  Good enough for me."

Then there was a little chapter about having a third kid... saving this for the future:

"Then the third arrives.  And as you hold her for the first time, you notice that your hands are steady and you're breathing easy.  The all-consuming fire is gone.  Love is just... love.  You don't feel threatened anymore by her or the world.  Because all of a sudden you see in her teeny little face that she is the world.  And you understand that you're not her protector anyway; she has One of Those.  You're just her teacher.  You're just borrowing her for a little while.  You decide not to spend so much of your precious time begging God to shield her from the world.  Seems silly, all of a sudden.  Because she, God, the world, they are all mixed up together inside that new skin.  

Then, as you count her tiny fingers with yours, you check your heart and find no guilt there.  Because you understand that you are about to present your older children with the greatest gift of their lives.  Who else but a sibling travels with you from the start of life's path to the bitter end?  And you know, now, that if your first and second born spend the next few months relearning that They're Not the Center of the Universe, well, good then.  It's an important thing to know and it's a lesson best learned early.  So there's another gift to them, courtesy of you, and this littlest one.

You understand that things will get tougher when she comes home.  You will sweat and curse more at the grocery store.  You will have less money to buy her the right things.  You will look far less graceful at playdates.  But you will care less.  Because you have listened to and spoken to enough honest parents to understand that we're all in this together.  And there is no prize for most composed. So you've decided to stop making parenthood harder by pretending it's not hard.

You look down at her, your third, and you think, what's so different about you?  But before you finish asking the question, you know the answer.  And your heart says to hers: Oh. You're not different from the other two.  I am.  I'm learning how to love without so much fear.  How to relax a bit in this brutiful [not a typo- she combines beautiful and brutal and makes the word brutiful] world.  How to let go and trust.  You are helping me breathe easier, you three.  One at a time and together."

Yep... I'm going to keep going.  I loved this because of my little Liam:

"We have to actually believe that our kids are okay.  

I know.  Tough.  But it can be done.  We can start believing by erasing the idea that education is a race.  It's not.  Education is like Christmas.  We're all just opening our gifts, one at a time.  And it is a fact that each and every child has a bright shiny present with her name on it, waiting there underneath the tree.  God wrapped it up and he'll let us know when it's time to unwrap it.  In the meantime, we must believe that our children are okay.  Every last one of them. The straight-A ones and the ones with autism and the naughty ones and the chunky ones and the shy ones and the loud ones and the so-far-behind ones.  

Because here's what I believe: a child can survive a teacher or other children accidentally suggesting that he's not okay as long as when he comes home, he looks at his mama and knows by her face that he really is okay.  Because that's all they're asking isn't it?  

Mama, am I okay?  

In the end, a child will call the rest of the world liars and believe his mama.  So when he asks us with his eyes and heart if he's okay, let's tell him: Yes baby.  You are okay.  You are more than okay.  You are my dream come true.  You are everything I've ever wanted and I wouldn't trade one you for a million anybody elses.  This part of life, this school part, might be hard for you.  But that's okay, because it's just one part of life.  And because we can do hard things, together.  We are a team.  And I am so grateful to be on your team."

Okay I'm tired of typing now but.  I just loved reading this and knowing that my little Liam is going to be okay.

October 14 = New Book Day

I started a new book today- Carry on Warrior by Glennon Doyle Melton.  I took pictures of these pages because I wanted to quote them in the blog.  So instead of sharing the pictures with the words way too small to read- I'll type up this chapter because it's that good.

The chapter is titled: Smelly Coughy Guy

"Here's why I really love and need yoga: because of Smelly Coughy Guy.

I am easily overwhelmed.  There are lots of things I have to do each day to remind myself that everyone is okay, including me.  Yoga is one of these things I do to stay calm and remember.  Yoga is like a sabbath; it's how I prove to myself that I am not in charge, that if I drop off the face of the earth for an hour with no other goal than to breathe, the world will keep spinning without me.  Because, as it turns out, I am not the one causing it to spin.  I'm just along for the ride.  I practice yoga to find quiet and peace and stillness: to prove to myself that those things exist.  I also practice yoga to learn how not to be bothered by things that are out of my control.  That's how I want to be.  ANd people have to practice if they ever hope to be how they want to be.

I practice yoga at my local gym.  When I am not writing or frantically searching for sippy cups, I am at the gym.  Not because I am really all that interested in fitness but because my gym has a wonderful nursery full of people who will take my kids, so I "work out" a lot.  If my post office had a wonderful nursery full of people who would take my kids, I would mail a lot.  Sometimes Adrianne and I meet at the gym and just sit on the stationary bikes and talk.  We don't even move our legs."

Besides the writing and the Adrienne part, I could have written that myself.

Here's another part I like:

"I pray and pray for God to help me feel some peace and stillness in the midst of my mommy life instead of feeling constantly like a dormant volcano likely to erupt at any given moment and burn my entire family alive.  And God says: Well G, here's the thing.  Peace isn't the absence of distraction or annoyance or pain.  It's finding Me, finding peace and calm, in the midst of those distractions and annoyances and pains."

Here's a picture of the kids leaving the gym after I had done basically what my new favorite author spoke about... "working out" but really taking advantage of that nursery full of wonderful people.



The weather's been really nice lately so we've been taking more walks- here's a picture of the kids in the double stroller- we haven't used this in a long time.




October 13 = Tunnel Day

Here's Malia in a tunnel:


And here's a picture Zachary got of me and the kids- I hate being in pictures but I want my kids to know that I was around during their childhood so here's proof:


October 12 = Busy Day

I'm writing this post a month and a half after and looking at it- what a busy day!

First, Liam grabbed this off the counter and helped himself.  Candy corn and honey roasted peanuts.  Delicious.


Then here's Malia and her creative way of reaching the piano:


I had to take Malia with us to Liam's OT appointment- which I don't make a habit of doing because she's not a fan of being in doctors' offices but she did really well today.

Look at these sweet babies!!



 






I know that's a lot of pictures of Malia in sunglasses and now I'm going to add a video.  But she's just so cute!!



Also as I made dinner tonight, the kids were quietly playing downstairs.  Here's what I found when I went down to get them :)


October 11 = Soccer Day

I just love this picture of Malia:



And here are some pictures of Malia from soccer today: 
 

Soccer "practice" is hard.

October 10 = Praying Mantis Day

First, here's a picture of Malia helping to clean up- she's so sweet.



And then... we went to the playground across the street today and Zachary found this praying mantis.  He brought it home to take pictures of it (we had left our phones at home).



Then he came back to help me get the kids home... via bike.


Also, here's my little momma Malia loving on her Minnie...


and here's a video of lunch on a typical day in the Holliday house:


October 9 = Pick up Kids Day

We drove to Smithfield today to pick up the kids and let Ms. Malia try on her Halloween costume- I think we picked a good one!


God bless sleeping babies on road trips- they're the best!


October 8 = Relax Day

We slept in, did a little shopping and got to watch a movie today- we saw The Girl on the Train- a book that I've read.  Oh and we ate at restaurants.  Like three times.  My favorite kind of movie is one adapted from a book I've read so I was really exciting.  Here's one of our purchases from today- Liam and Malia's Halloween costumes!


October 7 = See Grandma & Daps Day

Zachary and I drove the kids halfway to NC (near Richmond) to deliver Liam and Malia to their grandparents for the weekend!  We thought about spending the weekend at home so we could get stuff done but Zachary decided I needed to stay away from home so I could have a weekend to relax!  Here's Liam and Malia eating some cheetos when they got to Grandma and Daps house!



October 6 = Flu Shot Day

While Liam was in school today, I took Malia to the only drug store I could find that gave flu shots to kids her age.  We had to wait a while so I got her this phone... she's a fan.



She took it like  champ.  Later, we walked to get Liam from the bus and she pushed Chase in the baby doll stroller- such a momma.


Tuesday, November 15, 2016

October 4 = Knitting Socks Day

This is all I have from today:


October 1 = Wedding Day!!

I'm going to blame someone else for the fact that it's taken me a month and a half to write this post.  I asked my brother to send me the pictures he took of the kids before the wedding and he hasn't yet.  He's incredibly busy so I don't blame him at all.  But if I can make it someone else's fault that I'm so behind, why not?!

I decided to get Liam a haircut this morning- he needed one badly and when would have been a better time to do it than his uncle's wedding day (and when I had people around to help)?



Here are two of the pictures that Matt got of my precious little children before the big event:




So how did the kids do??  They were memorable.


Liam did make it down the aisle but promptly exited stage left as soon as he got up there.  Malia did the opposite.  I had to carry her down the aisle but once she got up there she was pretty good for a while.  She stood with Zachary for a few minutes, picked some flowers off of bushes for a few minutes, and then made her grand exit right next to Daps and right in between Matthew and Rachel.  It was really cute.


Soon after, my mom and Uncle Matt came to pick them up so Zachary and I were able to enjoy the reception child-free.