Saturday, April 14, 2012

Breaking the fourth wall

I had the best conversation with Xander in the car, coming home from school yesterday.  Actually, it was between Sophie the giraffe and Xander; he didn't speak to ME once.  But he told Sophie all about his day and even sang songs with her.  It's like he knows I voice the stuffed animals in his life, but then doesn't at the same time.  At one point he asked me if I wanted to hear Sophie sing the ABCs, and I said sure, I'd love to have her sing to me.  The next sentence was him asking if I could make Sophie sing. :)

In other news, the Children's Museum is about a trillion times more busy on a rainy Saturday afternoon than it was on Easter Sunday.  Thank goodness for Carlie and Yasha and their parents for keeping me company on those respective days.  Also, they say money can't buy happiness?  Perhaps that's true in the long run, but in the short term I love my new thermos so I can take hot chai to work.  And these popsicle molds are the best invention ever:

Fill with fruit juice, freeze, and then suck the juice from the straw as it melts.  Yay for lack of mess!


Lastly, Pesach is now over.  I'm extremely hopeful that this means less sweeping up of matzah crumbs in my future.  Ari LOVES matzah - he just cut a second tooth and loves the crunchiness - but this week I've been best friends with the kitchen broom.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

The 80s just blew Xander's mind

"Xander, Xander, bo-bander, banana fana fo-fander, me my mo-mander, XANder."

He stood there in shock with his mouth open, processing.  Then he practically shook himself, closed his mouth with a snap and immediately demanded that I sing it again. :)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Nature amazes me

This is not a caterpillar.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

The calendar is cruel.

Why does the week after Easter have to be the week of Passover?

All my non-Jewish co-workers at the Archives are bringing in their dessert leftovers to share.  And none of them are kosher for Pesach!  So far I've had to turn down two different types of cake, one batch of chocolate chip cookies, and some yummy cookie-with-jam pastry.

It's just not fair!!!

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Ari's birthday party last week

(Second seder at the AJA was great.  Just long.  And now I'm tired, but I know that if I I don't post these pictures tonight, it'll be another week before I get to them. So sorry folks, no captions.)


The day before the party, we gave Ari his gift from us, the ride-on car.  If you happen to notice that it looks amazingly like Xander's from two years ago that was then put in the basement... don't tell him!











The party the next morning:










Ayden and Matt




Rachel and Jack, Rachael




Ari and Yasha








Nancy, me, Xander








 Smash cake.




Cupcake cake.  

















Thank you to Danyul for the filming and narration!




Since cupcakes are messy, we all moved outside for the actual eating:











He was such a dainty eater we had to actually break off a piece for him... and then he only nibbled it.








Julian




Ari copying



Julian, Eden, Carlie, Yasha, Xander



Carlie, Xander and the bubble blower




Yasha, half of Yael, and the all important yellow balloon



Julian running




Liam and Kaya










Friday, April 6, 2012

I just earned a Jewish mother merit badge.

Clean house?  Check.
White tablecloth? Check.
Charoset?  Check.
Hard-boiled eggs, with one roasted?  Check.
Brisket?  Check.
Chicken? Check.
Noodle kugel?  Check.
Corn?  Check.
Potato/carrot/brown sugar dish?  Check.
15 minute kid seder before dinner?  Check.

I refuse to let the fact that the brisket and kugel were originally frozen to get in the way of my joy. I cooked! And it tasted good!  (And Jonathan did all the clean-up.  Hooray!)  The night ended with a visit from Lambchop, Charlie Horse, and Hush Puppy, courtesy of Shari Lewis' Passover special.

A very successful evening, I would say, especially considering it was the first full-on seder I've ever done myself.

And wow.  Sometimes it really hits me.   I'm a grown-up!

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Notes from the past few days

1) Me: "I'll do [whatever] if I have the time."
X:  "Well, I have lots of time, I gave it to you!  I gave Daddy time too."  [extends his hand toward us, palm up, "giving" us his time.]

2) For work I'm currently writing all the text for a bus tour of Jewish Cincinnati.  It's interesting... kind of.  I've now written three blurbs for cemeteries.  Why is that Jews visit cemeteries?  It's an honest question, not rhetorical.

3)  [J licks his thumb and swipes it over X's chin, cleaning it off]
    X: "Ewwww!  I don't want you to put spit on my face!!"

4) We're feeding the cats wet cat food now, in an effort to curb Simcha's weight.  Ari tries to stick his hand in the bowl at every opportunity.  Why oh why must he like cat food?!  (And for you smart alecks, yes, that question is rhetorical.)

5) Xander still can't say two words properly, or at least, properly without slowing down and giving them thought.  "Spaghetti" and "elephant" come out half the time as "pasgetti" and "ephelant."  It's the cutest thing ever.

6) I'm having fun with the show "Lilyhammer," about a New York mob boss who moves to Norway in the witness protection program.  I started watching it at the recommendation of my Norwegian friend, Trond, and it's hilarious.  It's also a Netflix original series.  I'm impressed with them.  Jonathan, on the other hand, has gotten into "Modern Family."  Again, very cute.  But the doofus dad on that show turns me off; they go from being fun characters, to stereotypical caricatures, pretty quickly.

7) Our child is developing a love of reading!  He wants me to spell everything, and delights in telling me that [this word] starts with [this letter].  He's usually right, too, except that he mixes up C and S, and doesn't understand vowels.   The words from today's trip home from school, as spelled out on a napkin at his request, were:

SEDER
OSHER
SIMCHA
YENTL
ALEXANDER LOVING
AIRPLANE  (which he was very confused by)

The best was when we pulled up to our house and I tried to take the paper away, to get him out of his carseat:  "No!  I'm not done looking!"  My heart went pitter-patter.  

(And tonight as we made charoset according to the recipe of the song, we talked about ch, and how there's no such letter in English.  Challah, charoset, Chanukah, Baruch, Michal.  Ah the forehead creases as he processed.)

8) Pesach/Passover.  Cleaning.  Brisket.  Seder.  Vacuuming.  Chocolate toffee matzah.  Charoset-making.  All are quickly becoming one and the same in my book.

9) Ari now has shoes.  He stands up for 3 to 4 seconds on his own before plopping down.  He'll be a toddler soon.  Aaagh!

10) My "senior service" is all outlined, and my sermon is complete.  A week and a half from now, it will be done and I'll have marked off every last thing in my HUC checklist.

And I have nothing left to say...

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

"Don't Carpe Diem"

I found this wonderful article on parenting at the Huffington Post, by Glennon Melton.  Instead of just linking it, I'm going to cut and paste it below, in the hopes that more people will read it.  I agree with almost every single thing she says.  Except, as a rabbinical student, I would frame it differently: instead of what she calls "kronos" and "kairos," regular time and God's time, I would name it (as I have before in sermons) "mundane" time and "sacred" time.  How can we, as harried parents, increase the moments of holiness in our lives?  How can we actively turn mundane time into sacred time?  'Tis the question of the ages.

So with no further ado:


Don't Carpe Diem, by Glennon Melton

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 message is right and good. 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 to CARPE DIEM makes me worry that if I'm not in a constant state of intense gratitude and ecstasy, I'm doing something wrong.

I think parenting young children (and old ones, 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 are impressive accomplishments. 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 literally 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. These are wonderful ladies. Monkees, probably. 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 moment, Amma had arranged one of the new bras I was buying on top of her sweater and was sucking a lollipop that she must have found on the ground. She also had three shop-lifted clip-on neon feathers stuck in her hair. She looked exactly like a contestant from Toddlers and Tiaras. I couldn't find Chase anywhere, and Tish was grabbing the pen on the credit card swiper thing 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."

That's not exactly what I wanted to say, though.

There was a famous writer who, when asked if he loved writing, replied, "No. but I love having written." What I wanted to say to this sweet woman was, "Are you sure? Are you sure you don't mean you love having parented?"

I love having written. And I love having parented. My favorite part of each day is when the kids are put to sleep (to bed) and Craig and I sink into the couch to watch some quality TV, like Celebrity Wife Swap, and congratulate each other on a job well done. Or a job done, at least.

Every time I write a post like this, I get emails suggesting that I'm being negative. I have received this particular message four or five times -- G, if you can't handle the three you have, why do you want a fourth?

That one always stings, and I don't think it's quite fair. Parenting is hard. Just like lots of important jobs are hard. Why is it that the second a mother admits that it's hard, people feel the need to suggest that maybe she's not doing it right? Or that she certainly shouldn't add more to her load. Maybe the fact that it's so hard means she IS doing it right...in her own way...and she happens to be honest.

Craig is a software salesman. It's a hard job in this economy. And he comes home each day and talks a little bit about how hard it is. And I don't ever feel the need to suggest that he's not doing it right, or that he's negative for noticing that it's hard, or that maybe he shouldn't even consider taking on more responsibility. And I doubt anybody comes by his office to make sure he's ENJOYING HIMSELF. I doubt his boss peeks in his office and says: "This career stuff...it goes by so fast...ARE YOU ENJOYING EVERY MOMENT IN THERE, CRAIG???? CARPE DIEM, CRAIG!"

My point is this. I used to worry that not only was I failing to do a good enough job at parenting, but that I wasn't enjoying it enough. Double failure. I felt guilty because I wasn't in parental ecstasy every hour of every day and I wasn't MAKING THE MOST OF EVERY MOMENT like the mamas in the parenting magazines seemed to be doing. I felt guilty because honestly, I was tired and cranky and ready for the day to be over quite often. And because I knew that one day, I'd wake up and the kids would be gone, and I'd be the old lady in the grocery store with my hand over my heart. Would I be able to say I enjoyed every moment? No.

But the fact remains that I will be that nostalgic lady. I just hope to be one with a clear memory. And here's what I hope to say to the younger mama gritting her teeth in line:

"It's helluva hard, isn't it? You're a good mom, I can tell. And I like your kids, especially that one peeing in the corner. She's my favorite. Carry on, warrior. Six hours till bedtime." And hopefully, every once in a while, I'll add -- "Let me pick up that grocery bill for ya, sister. Go put those kids in the van and pull on up -- I'll have them bring your groceries out."

Anyway. 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 staring down the clock till bedtime time, it's ten excruciating minutes in the Target line time, it's four screaming minutes in time out time, it's two hours till 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. It's 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 perfect curves of her teeny elf mouth and her asianish 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.

Like when I'm stuck in chronos time in the grocery line and I'm haggard and annoyed and angry at the slow check-out clerk. And then I look at my cart and I'm transported out of chronos. And suddenly I notice the piles and piles of healthy food I'll feed my children to grow their bodies and minds and I remember that most of the world's mamas would kill for this opportunity. This chance to stand in a grocery line with enough money to pay. And I just stare at my cart. At the abundance. The bounty. Thank you, God. Kairos.

Or when I curl up in my cozy bed with Theo asleep at my feet and Craig asleep by my side and I listen to them both breathing. And for a moment, I think- how did a girl like me get so lucky? To go to bed each night surrounded by this breath, this love, this peace, this warmth? 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. And at the end of the day, I don't remember exactly what my kairos moments were, but I remember I had them. And that makes the pain of the daily parenting climb worth it.

If I had a couple Kairos moments during the day, I call it a success.

Carpe a couple of Kairoses a day.

Good enough for me.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Pics... but not birthday ones

Those will come later.  These were taken with my phone over the past week.



Ari passed out in the car.





It's a baby control center at the doctor's office!  No matter where he turns, there's something to play with.




Very very excited; note the hands.



My Gryffindor boys.


Also, Ari cut his very first tooth today!  Lower right in the middle.  Xander's response was immediate when we showed him: "Yay!  Now he can eat French toast!"

(Cute that may be, but I almost regretting telling Xander later tonight, because he was mad at me that I didn't insist that Ari brush his teeth along with him.  "Ari has teeth now, he should have to brush too!")

Sunday, April 1, 2012

Ari's birthday party

12 adults, 10 kids.  (And only 2 babies, so 8 real kids.)

Weather was inconsistent: to hold it inside in the house or outside in the backyard?  In the end, 'twas both.

Bubbles, chalk writing, trucks, slide play structure, and cupcakes outside. 

Ball tent, play kitchen, every other toy we own, and fruits/veggies/chips and humus inside.

But the hit of the party?  Decorating helium balloons.  Jonathan's idea, of course.

Pictures and video to follow... once the 100+ photos get uploaded and sorted.  My goal is by the end of the week.  Tomorrow is devoted to cleaning the chaos of the house!