• the one about thanking miley cyrus

    Dear Miley Cyrus,

    How are you feeling this morning? Do you have a headache from your performance last night, or is it just the rest of us who got to witness your artistry? How’s the foam finger? I’m going to guess that it, like the rest of us, is still quite traumatized.

    Many moms, bloggers, websites, critics, etc, are bashing you today for the spectacle you put on for last night’s VMA’s. I’m not going to do that. I’m actually going to thank you.

    I’m a teacher, and in my classroom, I always show a good example and a bad example of the way I want my students to behave. The examples of poor behavior are usually the ones that stick in my students’ minds, and we refer back to them throughout the year. We always talk about why that behavior was not a good example and what we can do differently.

    I am also a mother, and as my daughters get older, I find myself using poor behavior examples as a way to teach them, too. When my daughter witnesses a child not sharing her toys, I use it as a way to discuss how she would handle that situation in her own life. When we see a child throwing a fit in a store, we talk about how that is not an appropriate way to act. When she acts poorly, we talk about what we could do differently next time. You see, I am not raising children. I am raising adults. Moreover, I am raising women, and last night’s exhibition (for lack of a better word) has given me teachable moments for years to come.

    Thanks to YouTube, I’m certain I will still be able to access last night’s exhibition when my daughter is old enough to view it (though I’m not sure, at 29 years old, that I was old enough to see that).

    When she’s ready for her first school dance, and she’s worried about what to wear, I will show her that a sequined leotard with a demonic teddy bear applique is not only unflattering but reminiscent of what some kids in her toddler gymnastics class used to wear (all of their undies used to splooge out of the sides, too). I will remind her that gentlemen aren’t really into dating girls who are 16 trapped in a 3 year old’s onesie.

    When she’s unsure about dancing and having cool “moves,” I will prove to her that bending over, straight-legged, and having a butt seizure only invites large-bootied women wearing overgrown stuffed teddy bear backpacks to come and spank them. I’m sure I will still be having nightmares about that.

    When she’s feeling pressure to be sexy and suggestive (because all of the “cool kids” are), I will show her that crotch grabbing on anyone other than Michael Jackson (RIP) is just an emergency camel toe adjustment, and anyone who tries to tell you otherwise is just a liar.

    When she’s wanting attention from boys, I will let her know that the way to get it is not by using a foam finger as a loofa. The only attention you will gain by doing that will be from married men dressed as Beetlejuice, and, truly, ain’t nobody got time for that.

    I’m sure, if I could uncover my eyes long enough, I could find even more teachable moments from last night’s episode (another fitting description), but I’m not ready to look any further at this point.

    I don’t blame you, Miley, and I won’t blame you, if my daughters make some of your mistakes. I know that I am the one who is responsible for their upbringing, their morals, their education, their self-concepts, their everything. I wouldn’t dare entrust that responsibility to you or anyone else.

    I pray that I can be my daughters’ examples of good in this world. That I can show them that intelligence, and wit, and strength, will attract the right friends and the right men. That I can show them that you don’t have to be the best dancer to have fun at a party, and that everyone likes a good Macarena. That I can show them that sexy is having legit football knowledge in a group of guys or being confident in the body that has birthed a child or two or three. That I can show them that approval from a man is completely unnecessary unless it’s your husband, and the fact that he married you is approval enough.

    No one is perfect, especially even you, Miley, and our opinions of you really don’t matter. Part of female empowerment is doing whatever you want to do, but if that, to you, means hanging your tongue out of your mouth like a dog in a hot car, it seems Gene Simmons already trademarked that.

    So, thank you, Miley. Thank you for all the lessons I can teach my girls from your example last night. Thank you for making the mistakes so they hopefully don’t have to.

    And thank you for at least having underwear on, even if they did splooge out of your leotard.

    Sincerely,

    The Mama

    For anyone who is 1) not at work and 2) not around small children and would like to watch Miley’s teachable moments from last night’s VMAs, click here…with caution.

  • the one about giving myself permission

    I’ve read a number of blog posts granting moms permission to stay in yoga pants all day. To throw your hair back in a pony tail on day 6 without a shower. To skip the workout and watch DVR instead.

    And I gotta say…I like reading those blogs. I feel better when I read that it is OK to let myself go.

    But really? I don’t feel better. I feel worse. Because I have let myself go.

    As a mama, I put my girls before myself. I think it is expected that I do that. But it doesn’t stop there. I put my husband before myself. I put my friends before myself. I put just about everything before myself with exception of my 47 inch tall laundry pile. It’s probably last on the list. But right above the laundry pile is little big ol’ me.

    What happens, though, if we give ourselves permission to put ourselves first? Not all the time. No. We can’t. It’s not realistic, and we did sign up for certain sacrifices when we decided to grow tiny humans. However, what if for just a few minutes day or week, whatever you and your family can spare, you decide to take some time for yourself?

    What if you decide that it is OK if you wear pants with buttons? And God forbid if those pants actually flatter your butt? Even if you’re not at your “dream size” or “happy weight,” what if you bought some jeans that fit you right now and made you feel amazing? I mean, Target had some on clearance for 6 bucks (not that I was at Target for the 4th time this week or anything).

    What if you stop scraping your chipped nail polish off with a credit card (just me?) and actually pull out the remover and properly remove said polish? And what if you get really ambitious and actually paint them a new color? Not gonna lie, I did that this morning…albeit locked in the bathroom, but I did it.

    What if you give yourself permission to take your children to the childcare at the gym so you can get yourself in better shape? Or what if you let your children watch a movie in the other room while you exercise at home? It’s not going to hurt them, but it will help you…which ultimately helps them. At some point, “I just had a baby…10 months ago,” had to stop being my excuse, and I had to give myself permission to just. do. something. for. myself. (and by myself, I mean my flabby ass and love handles for days.)

    True story, I bought Insanity at the beginning of the summer. I had ambitions of using it religiously and getting in the best shape of my life. Well, the fear of the program caused me to wait about 4 weeks before actually doing the fit test. After the fit test didn’t go so well, it took me another 2 weeks to actually start the first workout. The first workout went something like this:

    Minute 1: This sucks! This is too hard!
    Minute 3: I can’t do this! Where’s my water?
    Minute 6: I’m ready to quit. I hate this.
    Minute 9: Oh, Ellen’s on!

    Yep. I quit. I felt so defeated, out of shape, and horrible about myself. After thinking about it the rest of that day, I decided that Insanity wasn’t for me right now. I gave myself permission to find something else that would work for me, but I did not grant myself permission to give up on making myself look and feel better.

    So, the next day, I started Jillian Michaels’ 30 Day Shred. I have done this program before, achieved great results, and it is only 25 minutes long, which fits perfectly with my lifestyle right now. I can accept my failure of Insanity, but I cannot accept that it is OK to wear frumpy clothes and yoga pants daily just because I’m a mom. I’m only 29. I have a lot of hot years left, folks.

    These things that make us feel better…like painted nails or applying makeup or exercising or showering or cooking great meals or drinking a glass of wine or listening to music or whatever…these are important things. If we aren’t happy and healthy and feeling good, our families aren’t either.

    So, Mamas…I’ve written your permission slip. All you have to do is sign it.

  • the one about mompetition

    I just returned from a little trip to Kansas City, Missouri. No, really, it was fun.

    One of the things that made it fun was this awesome shopping area called the Plaza. It was like a village in and of itself, full of great stores that we don’t have here in the metropolis of Muncie. As you can imagine, that’s a pretty extensive list.

    Among those stores was one called Hot Mama. I initially laughed at the name and saw my reflection in the window and thought not.for.me. However, other members of our group showed interest in it so when in Kansas City…

    I was pleasantly surprised when I walked in and saw casual, cute, modest, and fashionable clothes. It was kind of like an Ann Taylor Loft for non-teachers, and since that shoe fits me right now, I felt right at home.

    I found a couple of shirts on clearance and overall enjoyed the experience. However, two poster-sized photos on the wall caught my eye. One image was of a mom wearing high heels and a cute trench coat, balancing an armful of groceries on the left and a bouquet of fresh flowers on the right. Her picture perfect toddler was waiting patiently in the doorway.

    Glance at myself.

    Jeans on the 4th day without a wash. Hair in stubby ponytail. Haven’t been to the grocery in two weeks. People buy fresh flowers for themselves? Why isn’t that toddler having a potty accident or screaming for Bubble Guppies?

    I fail.

    The second photo was of another young (presumable) mom wearing a cute outfit, standing on the stairs of her home, looking like she was about ready to go somewhere cool, talking on her cell phone. Smiling.

    Think to myself.

    She’s probably getting ready to go on a date with her husband that he planned every detail of. Or she’s getting ready to go have a night on the town with her friends. Her kids are probably at church camp, building houses for the homeless.

    I fail again.

    All of these thoughts of failure because of two photos of paid models at a store called Hot Mama for cryin’ out loud. I felt silly and tried to put it all out of my mind, but the thoughts still haunt me this very minute.

    What is it about us moms and the epic amounts of pressure we place on ourselves to be everything to everyone? And to look good doing it, too?

    I’m calling it mompetition because, well, that’s what it is. I’m eyeing you because I want to know how you managed to shower, wear clean & cute clothes, and have happy children all on the same day. I’m mad at Pinterest because every recipe for homemade yogurt or DIY bug repellant is just so easy and staring me right in the face…taunting me…telling me all the cool moms are doing it. I’m glaring at you because you found time to work out and probably even did push-ups with your kid sitting on your back eating sugar snap peas, and I, well, didn’t.

    You all win. I lose. I fail again.

    Of course, no one makes me feel this way. I do it myself. It’s my own insecurity, shortcomings, and high expectations that earn me just a participant’s ribbon at the mompetition. It’s my guilt over not breastfeeding my children until they turned two and letting them watch some cartoons in the morning while I get dressed. And before bed. And probably while I make dinner. It’s my guilt over the times when I can’t get Noelle to eat fruits and vegetables while other kids are inhaling avocados and hummus and kale chips like there’s no tomorrow. It’s my guilt that the house is rarely picked up when my husband comes home and dinner is only a phone call away (pizza? Thai? carside to go?) and I know he just has to be thinking and what is it that you do all day?

    Those other kids must be happier. Those other husbands must love their wives more. 

    I’ve got to stop this way of thinking. If I could just flip my mindset and believe that the real mompetition is competing against the clock, making the most of each and every minute with my girls, I may realize that I’m not as big of a loser as I once thought. If mompetition could be beating your own personal record of daily boo-boo kissing, tangled hair coming, Disney movie watching, or bedtime story reading…if it could be making a gooey-er PB&J sandwich than yesterday’s or building a taller block tower or making this bath time’s bubble beard a little longer…if it could be seeing which will make my girls more excited– finger paint or play doh? bubbles or sidewalk chalk? sprinkler or baby pool? hot chocolate or ice cream? If it could be realizing that my girls get smarter, happier, and kinder every day, regardless of how clean my house is or how long it took me to prepare dinner…if all of that could be the real mompetition, then I think we are all doing a lot better than we thought. We are all winning.

    Let’s not forget that somedays, mompetition might mean that your kid cried louder than the day before or threw a more epic tantrum in the Disney princess aisle or successfully stalled bedtime longer than ever. We all have those days. Still winning.

    And when my 3 year old chugs my Diet Coke when I leave the room? Well, there’s always tomorrow.

  • the one about Bella

    We were all ready to leave for our week long vacation in South Carolina. The car was packed, loaded down with all of the essentials– swimsuits, sunscreen, clothes, shoes, diapers, wine, etc, but one question stopped our car from leaving and held us up for nearly an extra hour.

    “Where’s Baby Bella?”

    As our 3 year old asked us this, a myriad of thoughts entered my brain.

    Where’sBabyBella?Shit.Idon’tknow.Inherbed?Inthebag?IknowIdidn’tpackheralready.Inthebathroom?Inourbedroom?Lostoutsideinthebushes?Ihavenoclue.

    We turned the house upside down for many minutes, looking for a small, pink, stuffed cat. Baby Bella and Noelle had been best friends since the day Noelle was born (Baby Bella was a gift from the hospital gift shop via Nona Boo i.e. Luke’s mom). We have taken Baby Bella on practically every vacation, errand, and adventure, and not a night goes by that Noelle doesn’t sleep with her. Noelle rubs her nose with Baby Bella’s tail until she falls fast asleep. It’s the sweetest thing, really. Baby Bella has been seen in nearly all of our professional family photographs (you pick your battles). We knew there was no chance we could make it a week out of state without this kitty with us. Yes, I said, we. Luke and I were just as torn up about it as Noelle.

    After we had spent too long looking for Baby Bella with no success, we decided we had to get going. An 8 hour car ride to our first destination awaited us, and we were already getting a late start. We said a little prayer that Baby Bella would turn up, but Luke and I exchanged worried glances that perhaps she was gone forever.

    “I saw Noelle carrying her outside while she was picking flowers. She may be in the tall grass.”

    “I know I didn’t pack her up. I wouldn’t have missed that.”

    We played out various scenarios but tried to forget about it. We didn’t want to dwell upon not having her for Noelle’s sake.

    We drove several hours and ended up sleeping at a Knoxville hotel for the night. Night one without Baby Bella. Thank goodness Noelle was pretty tired and didn’t give it too much thought.

    The next morning, we opened our bags to get dressed for another day of traveling, and lo and behold, there. she. WAS! Baby Bella had snuck her way into Noelle’s bag (I really have no idea how this happened), and she was with us all along! We all rejoiced, and Luke and I caught ourselves almost a little more excited than Noelle was.

    After many more hours of travel, we finally made it to our vacation destination and began a fun-filled trip with Luke’s family. Our condo consisted of six children ages six and under, and everything was rainbow smiles and fairy farts until…

    …we lost Baby Bella again after the 2nd night. This time, we really lost her. It’s one thing to lose a stuffed animal inside your own home or even your own hometown. There are limited places where the thing could be. However, this was not our hometown. This was a place that had an ocean…an effin’ ocean…that the kitty could be swimming in. We had six kids around us at all times. It would be nothing for another kiddo to run off with her and hide her. The condo had two stories, three bedrooms, and many unfamiliar nooks and crannies to hide a small pink cat. Not to mention, we had restaurants, unfamiliar grocery stores, a new church, bike trails, and a swimming pool that would all make wonderful places to lose a beloved stuffed animal that your child has had since birth. SINCE BIRTH.

    Each night, Noelle would ask before she drifted off to sleep, “Are we gonna find that ol’ Bella?” I would reassure her that we would in fact find her. However, as the days went on, reality was setting in that we may have to leave without her, and we would never see her again. This thought seriously depressed me. Luke and I would whisper, “What are we going to do without her?”

    We looked in every place we could think of. We even called the lost and found of the whole resort. Under couch cushions. Under beds. In suitcases. In the bushes. No luck.

    On the last night of the trip, as I was taking a shower, I said a prayer to Saint Anthony, which is who you pray to when you lose something. In my whole-hearted intention, I prayed that my little girl would be reunited with her #1 beloved stuffed animal, some way, somehow.

    After my shower, I wanted a glass of ice water, so I opened the freezer to get some cubes. There she was. In the freezer. Baby Bella. Looking smug.

    “What the….?!”

    I pull her out, hold her by the neck, and catch my sister in law snickering as she went up the stairs.

    “She wasn’t in here the whole time! I know it!”

    Liz was disappointed I had found her so quickly, but I was right. Baby Bella was not in the freezer the entire time. Liz had planted her there as a way to humorously grant our reunion wish. The reality was that Baby Bella had been found inside Liz’s family’s bike trailer. We had used it at the beginning of the week before we received our own rented bikes to take the girls to the beach. Apparently, Noelle had stuffed Baby Bella down beneath the seat of the trailer and forgotten about her. Since that day, the bike trailer had been used by the other children, had been rained on, had been at the beach multiple times, and there she had been the entire time.

    I placed her back in the freezer and brought Noelle in, telling her I had a present for her in the freezer. When she opened the door and saw her oldest friend, she reacted in a way I wasn’t expecting. I fully expected a toddler-ific squeal, maybe a fist pump, but for sure a giggle or two. Instead, she whispered, “Bella,” grabbed her quickly, and nuzzled her into her neck for an eyes-closed, nearly tear-filled, embrace. Perhaps the way a mother embraces her child after many days apart.

    The remaining 24 hours of our trip, Bella wasn’t far from our sights. We felt so relieved that the little pink nugget would be making the trip back with us, after a much needed bath in the washing machine, of course. A week outside in the elements left her smelling like a dead oyster. Nonetheless, everything was as it should be, and our entire family, Bella and all, would be making the trip home, together.

    Bella became a topic of nightly discussion, and Luke’s brother, Seth, asked us once, “Were you guys thinking she would have her forever?”

    No, we weren’t. We just weren’t ready for her to be without her yet. Over the week, I spent some time thinking about why I was so torn up over a stuffed kitty that I could probably buy a replica of on Amazon for $20. I suppose it comes down to this. Bella represents Noelle as a baby and young toddler. She represents the innocence of a young girl, an innocence that will undoubtedly be lost far too soon once Noelle realizes that parts of this world are cruel, selfish, and downright evil. It won’t always be acceptable to drag around a stuffed animal, but for now it is, and I am told that this phase is one of the best phases of parenthood. She loves Bella, and she believes Bella loves her back. She believes, period. She believes in Santa and Cinderella and Princess Grizelda of Mumlumplop (a story Luke told her as a nonsensical joke that has now turned into an epic bedtime saga). She’s young. Bella keeps her young, and for that, I want to keep Bella around forever. Someday, Bella will go into a box somewhere, Toy Story 3 style, and I will have the memories.

    Welcome back, Baby Bella. You were missed…by us all.

  • the one about walking away

    What a difference a day makes.

    I distinctly remember the day when I decided that this would be my last year of teaching for a while. It was 6:45 in the morning, and I was dropping Noelle off at daycare. I walked her into the room, and I was excited for her because I saw that the teacher had the Play-Doh out. Play-Doh is kind of a luxury at our house because I don’t really like colorful, dried, crusty crap all over my floor.

    Anyway– the Play-Doh was out, and I said to Noelle, “Look! You get to play with Play-Doh!” The teacher then smiled and looked up from what she was doing and said, “No, actually, I am having the kids clean the dried up Play-Doh out of the utensils.”

    Oh, neat.

    Now, I’m not saying this activity was inappropriate or abusive or traumatizing. I’m sure it was highly necessary. Remember, I don’t like the dried, crusty crap either. However, the anguish of walking out of that room, leaving my daughter there to essentially de-boogerize Play-Doh utensils while I went to work felt like I may as well have let her stand outside in a blizzard in her swimsuit. It felt that…wrong.

    I spent that entire school day thinking about the possibility of staying home with the girls next year. For whatever reason, I grew just the tiniest pair of man parts and wrote an email to my principal that day, asking for a meeting to discuss something important to me. He was down in my room within the hour.

    I couldn’t believe that I was actually discussing this out loud. What had come over me? All my life, I have tried to do what I thought was right…what I thought everyone would agree with…what I thought was the most acceptable and appropriate…and that has really worked for me. I have achieved a lot…haven’t been to jail…I have felt success. However, I have aways been afraid to just take a leap of faith and risk making the wrong decision. There I was…taking this risk…and it felt so liberating.

    The fact that I had the courage to write that initial email pretty much told me that my mind was set. I was choosing to resign at the end of this school year. I was choosing to say goodbye to the job I was absolutely obsessed with getting. I was choosing to take a risk and accept that this may be a huge mistake, but I had to give it a try.

    I have felt very supported by friends, family, coworkers, and even people I don’t know very well. Everyone has told me that I will not regret this…that I can always go back…that the girls are only little once.

    I know all of this to be true, but turning my back on my classroom tomorrow as I hand over the keys and pack up the last 6 years of my life will be extremely difficult. I never took this decision lightly, and I spent many nights going back and forth with myself. In many ways, I loved being a working mom. It felt powerful. However, I am at peace with this choice, and I can’t wait to see what the future holds for my family. I know that this is not for everyone, and if you can make it work, Gurl make it werk.

    I think my final thoughts can be summarized in two words.

    I tried.

    I tried to be a kick ass teacher and a hands-on mom at the same time. I tried to get up early and workout (once) so that I didn’t have to waste precious evening hours at the gym. I tried to plan meals ahead of time so we wouldn’t  be faced with the question of “what are we eating for dinner?” at 7 o’clock each night. I tried to cram in a week’s worth of fun into a weekend to make up for all I missed. I tried to read professional books as well as fairy tales and Bible stories and SkippyJonJones. I tried to give everything to my school kids, but I realized the hard way that I can’t do that and give everything to my kids, my own kids, at the same time. I tried to do it all, save it all, be it all, and I couldn’t. I tried to be working woman, wonder woman, super woman, and I couldn’t.

    Some may call it failure. Some may call it stupidity what I did, leaving a job when there are plenty of people out there looking for one. Some may call it weakness.

    I call it “twenty seconds of insane courage, and I promise something good will come of it.” – We Bought a Zoo.