• the one about how she’ll thank me later

    Right now, my oldest daughter is three years old, but really she’s more like three & three-fourths, which really means she is about thirteen. Not a day goes by (it seems) that I don’t hear “You’re the meanest mom ever!”

    The first time she said it, it hurt. I cried. I thought, “What am I doing wrong?” “Why would she say that?” “Look at all I do to love her and help her grow, and that is what I get?”

    The second time she said it, I found it annoying.

    The third time she said it, I wore a smirk on my face.

    Now, since I have stopped counting how many times she has said it, I simply fist pump the air and adjust my mom jeans because yes, I have arrived.

    I am now the meanest mom in the world.

    By simply asking her to put away her toys when she is done with them, to brush her teeth, to eat vegetables, to, you know, get dressed, I have earned the highly coveted title.

    It was just that easy.

    But, I know it is only a matter of time before she will be thanking me. Thanking me for all of the chores I made her do against her will. Thanking me for teaching her manners and respect. Thanking me for not letting her wear Crocs with socks (my gawd).

    When she wants to be “cool” and hang out with the girls who party and drink underage and dress like rejected Bratz dolls…and I say absofreakinglutely not…she’ll thank me later.

    When she tries to wear a shirt to school that is too short, too tight, too see-through, too profane, too adult, too juvenile, too wrong…and I pull out my Ugly Christmas Sweater party attire for her to wear instead…she’ll thank me later.

    When she thinks that the only things that define beauty are make-up and her bra size (sorry, Child, but you’re doomed)…and I tell her that beauty is defined by the image of her soul…she’ll thank me later.

    When she thinks she has done the best she can do…and I push her to run just a little further, to work just a little harder, to dream just a little crazier…she’ll thank me later.

    When she falls in love with the bad boy, the rude boy, the loser boy, the apathetic boy…and I tell her to wait for the man who treats her like his equal and not his princess, like his gift and not his prize, like her father has treated me…she’ll thank me later.

    When she calls me in tears, stressed out because of money, because of work, because of life…and I tell her this, too, shall pass…she’ll thank me later.

    When she has a daughter of her own who gives her grief over the smallest little request, who challenges her like she never thought possible, who calls her the meanest mom in the world (!!)…and I try my hardest not to tell her “I told you so”…she’ll thank me later.

    For now, I’m the meanest mom in the world, and I plan to stay that way…

    until she thanks me later.

  • the one about “cans” and “can’ts”

    Since starting this blog and advertising my posts on Facebook, I have received a lot of positive feedback, a lot of virtual fist pumps from other young moms who can relate to what I write about, and I have also received a few questions.

    One question I have received more than once is “How do you do it?”

    This, in and of itself, is a loaded question with a lot of possible responses. Elaborate.

    “How do you do it all?”

    Clearly this question comes from complete strangers, because anyone who knows me personally knows that I do not, in fact, do it all. If you’ve been to my house, you have seen piles of laundry waiting to be folded and put away. You have seen dishes from yesterday’s dinner just waiting for “the maid” to do them. You have seen unfinished projects and unfinished rooms, leftovers from my last “cleaning & organizing spree” that I was never able to complete.

    If you were here right now, you would see me ignoring my 3 year old as she jumps from the armrest of the couch to the cushions, yelling “Cannon ball!”

    That’s what this blog is all about. I don’t do it all. I can’t do it all. We can’t, as women, do it all…as much as we like to believe we can.

    I shouldn’t say can’t. We are so powerful that we can do anything we put our minds to doing, but if you have ever found yourself doing it all, you probably have found that you can’t do it all very well. Something suffers. Something doesn’t get as much attention as it should. Something turns out poorly because you were rushing around like a crazy person.

    And it sucks if that “something” is a batch of chocolate chip cookies.

    But it really sucks if that “something” is your child.

    (Note: I just told the 3 year old to stop cannon balling on the couch)

    So, let’s stop, take a breath, and focus on what we can do.

    We can answer the door to the UPS guy in a bath towel while holding one child on the hip and keeping the other one from yanking the towel off from the floor.

    We can manage to stir something hot on the stove while singing Disney songs to the banging of plastic bowls and mixing spoons.

    We can buy a cart full of groceries and smush them around a cart full of children like some sort of human Tetris game.

    We can change a diaper with one hand and hold a cell phone to our ear with the other and restrain a wild, nakey-butt baby with our legs.

    We can kiss their boo-boos, hold their hands, and dry their tears.

    We can read the stories, find the blankies, and scare the monsters away.

    We are the mamas.

    There’s so much we can do when we think we can’t do anything.

  • the one about their hands

    Another night alone with the girls, thanks to an overworking husband.

    The spur of the moment “I won’t be home for dinner” overwhelmed me, and I felt the tears pooling beneath my eyes.

    It had been a long day for the 3rd day in a row. Household chores had piled up, toys were scattered across the floor, and I had no motivation to start dinner. My toddler wanted me to play a game. My baby wanted me to pick her up. My body wanted to sit down and rest.

    I felt my frustrations, on the verge of erupting, start to burn in my chest and on my face. I needed a break, and I wasn’t going to get one for several more hours.

    And then I saw five sparkly polished finger tips resting gently on my knee. Noelle’s perfectly dimpled hand had landed on me like an unintentional feather or stray eyelash. Afraid of startling it away, I didn’t move. I just looked down and attempted to memorize everything about it. The remnants of yesterday’s marker project staining the valley between her thumb and index finger. Her wrist stacked with plastic bracelets in neon colors. The back of her hand smeared with strawberry chapstick.

    It’s so easy to say, “I don’t care if my house is messy as long as my kids are having fun!” I tell myself that, too, but then it gets the best of me, and I’m ready to scream and cry and hire a maid. It is no coincidence that the plastic toy graveyard on my rug makes my skin crawl particularly on nights when my husband gets home much later than anticipated. I’m a mom. I am human. I lose it sometimes.

    But looking at her hand reminded me of her innocence. It reminded me that her sweet hands placed those toys on my floor. They colored with those crayons under my kitchen table. They flipped through the pages of those books, scattered and tattered and upside down.

    Her three year old hands, with no signs of aging or weathering or stress, were the culprits– the reasons for my near-breakdown over a messy floor. And when I think of it like that, it sounds really, really silly.

    I collected myself and decided to play along while Noelle gave me a check-up with her new doctor kit. She took my blood pressure, listened to my heart, took my temperature, and gave me a shot with the “shotter.”

    I felt much better.

    And when an evening car ride yielded two sleeping beauties in the backseat, I took notice of Charlotte’s precious hands as I carried her to bed.

    Sticky from her strawberries at dinner, one hand rested on my arm as the other dangled limply at her side. Her sweet fingers, perfectly dimpled like her sister’s, with little tufts of fuzz hooked deep in their crevices. Just enough dirt under a few of her fingernails– enough to make a note that it would be bath time tomorrow. Buttery smooth skin. Hands too young for nail polish and too young for bracelets. Soon enough, for sure.

    As I walked blindly into her dark room, I stumbled and slipped over a small plastic ball and a rogue electric toothbrush– dropped a few hours before by those delicate hands I was just admiring.

    The irony.

    Their hands.
    Soft and strong.
    Smooth and sticky.
    Destructive and healing.

    All the most perfect paradoxes.

  • the one about a place for the elves

    You know it’s getting closer to Christmas when your Facebook newsfeed blows up with photos of precarious little red elves making snow angels in powdered sugar, canoodling with Barbies, and chillin’ in the family Christmas tree.

    Yes, those elves are far from just sitting on shelves. Every Pinterest-worthy stunt the elf pulls taunts you as you side-stare your kid’s elf that hasn’t been moved in three days. Or maybe you don’t even own an Elf on the Shelf because 1) you’re afraid of failing at the art of Elfing or 2) you find it creepy and don’t like the look on its face. Maybe a combination of both.

    The Elf on the Shelf seems to be quite polarizing (according to my scientific Facebook study). You either love it or you hate it.

    Last year, we started the Elf on the Shelf tradition with Noelle. We read the book to her. We named him (Elfis). I looked at calendars on Pinterest with cute ideas for each day of December. We did a couple fun things with it– most notably, placing Elfis inside the freezer to “catch” Noelle sneaking ice cream bars while we were sleeping. It was all in good fun.

    However, when this year rolled around, I felt a little bad about it for some reason. It seemed a little weird this year to tell her that Elfis was watching her for Santa. She’s another year older, and she asks questions now, and she’s trying to figure everything out in her little world. We already do Santa and the Easter Bunny. One more “character” seemed to just put it over the top (for me).

    But because we started the tradition last year, she did ask about Elfis and his return. We couldn’t just forget about it and act like Elfis never happened. So, I went searching for ideas on how to incorporate the Elf on the Shelf into our daily December lives without going too far with it.

    I came up with this idea. I printed off these little cards. Then I put each one in a tiny little envelope with a number 1-25 marked on it. Elfis would deliver a new card each day until Christmas, sometimes in a new “spot” in the house, and sometimes in the same “spot” as the day before. It wasn’t about Elfis sneaking around and spying on Noelle for Santa. It was about Elfis delivering a special card to Noelle each day.

    On these cards, there were ideas for family fun, giving to others, or some sort of holiday-related activity. One day, we will make a gingerbread house together. Another day, we will give money to the Salvation Army bucket.

    My favorite  one so far was the one that said to have a family dance party. When we were done dancing around like fools in our living room, Luke and I looked at each other and said, “We need to do this more often.”

    These little cards brought to us by the world’s creepiest elf are bringing us together in a month that is pure craziness. The whole family has enjoyed the activities. The best part is that Noelle is waking up each day, looking forward to a new card from Elfis, rather than simply trying to find where the elf is hiding.

    Yes, we are still deceiving her by making her believe Elfis is bringing these cards each morning, but something tells me she knows it is us anyway.

    Do what you want with your elf. I truly believe it is all for a good cause. You might even decide to put your elf to work on your spouse.

    Like this…

    … and this.

    Hey, it’s worth a shot, right?

    Whatever you do, have an elfin’ good time.

  • the one about my love dare

    Before I start, let me make one thing very clear– I absolutely, 110%, love my children all of the time. It is there, the love in my heart, at all hours, of every day, of every year I have known them. I loved my children before they were even physically real to me. I dreamt of their faces and loved them before they had names and voices and the best hair you ever did see. 

    I love being their mama. I love being home with them. 
    I luh all uh dat. 
    However, however, it is not always easy to put my love into action. What do I mean by this? I mean, when my daughter is screaming that I am the meanest mommy in the world and swinging her tiny fists at me, it is not always easy to show my love for her in that moment.
    In fact, I have failed at that very thing over and over and over again. When she screams and yells and throws fits, I tend to take it personally. I engage in an argument with her. Sometimes, I blow up. I yell. I get angry. I feel like running away. Or drinking. Or running away and drinking. 
    My desire for the perfect family with perfectly behaved children in the most perfectly maintained home gets to the best of me in those times. When she’s pushing my buttons or yelling “no” to my every request or blatantly ignoring my attempts at disciplining her, I see all of that perfection going up in flames, and the loss of control breaks me. 
    I don’t think I can get more honest than this. 
    Her outbursts are typically short-lived, and my outbursts are easily tempered, but I know that there has to be a better way. 
    So, this week, I dared myself to love her. Like, really love her. To not only love her in my heart like I always have and always will, but to love her with my actions when she is doing her best to put me in the psych ward. 
    Starting Monday, when she screamed at me, I walked away. Yes, I did. I calmly said, “That is not a nice way to speak to me,” and I moved to another room. I didn’t engage with her. I didn’t even put her in timeout (don’t tell Super Nanny). I just walked away. 
    This. Helped. Me.
    She calmed down. She didn’t have an audience to scream at. The first day, she just resumed her normal activities. By the third day, she apologized. Without being forced to. She just did it.
    I was a mom she felt like apologizing to. 
    Since my frustration seemed to rest on the amount of control I was losing in these temper tantrums, simply walking away and taking a breather helped me to regain that control I had lost. All of the things I had tried before– timeouts, power struggles, lectures, loss of privileges, etc upon etc, had failed. This worked. This helped.
    When she decided to push the envelope by challenging me in public (screaming at the top of her lungs at Target), I felt tempted to either bribe her or spank her. However, I simply stated to her, “I don’t know why you are yelling. Please stop yelling,” and proceeded to the checkout as fast as possible. People stared at me. A lady switched out of our checkout line in favor of a quieter one, but I didn’t care. 
    When I got in the car, I called my sister in law. Calling her helped me to ignore the screaming banshee in the backseat, and it allowed me to vent my frustrations without emotionally damaging my child. By the time our conversation was over, my daughter was calmed down, my blood pressure was back to normal, and I was able to speak calmly with her about why her actions were inappropriate. 
    You’re probably thinking, “Well, if your child is still screaming and disobeying you, clearly this strategy isn’t working either.” It might seem like that to you, but I can honestly say that the number of daily outbursts has been significantly reduced. Noticeably reduced. My husband has picked up on, too. 
    My calm demeanor in the midst of her tantrums reassures her that I love her no matter what. When she feels loved, she doesn’t act up (as much). When she feels safe, she doesn’t need to test her boundaries. 
    Now, if you’re thinking that what I have been doing is easy, please think again. Staying calm, walking away, choosing not to engage with her in the midst of a meltdown and deliberately loving her when it is hard is one of the most challenging things I have done as a mother.
    Am I letting her get away with bad behavior? No, I don’t think so. Every child is different, and sometimes timeouts don’t work. My prayer is that the more I love her, deliberately love her, the less she will disrespect me as her mother, and the tantrums and outbursts will become fewer and farther between. 
    One week in, and they already have.
    Not only have her meltdowns tapered, but the amount of love she is showing to others is what really has me staggering. She has spoken to strangers instead of coldly staring. She has played with her sister, offered us pieces of her meals, and today she sincerely hugged a classmate goodbye.
    All things that had been rare findings before I dared to love her.
    As she gets older, I’m sure we will adapt and change our approach to discipline, just as we have already in her short three years on Earth, but for now, love is working. 
    Love is enough.
    Love works. It is life’s most powerful motivator and has far greater depth and meaning than most people realize. It always does what is best for others and can empower us to face the greatest of problems. We are born with a lifelong thirst for love. Our hearts desperately need it like our lungs need oxygen. Love changes our motivation for living. — excerpt from The Love Dare by Stephen and Alex Kendrick