• the one about how she couldn’t

    Another school year is upon us, and I am pinching myself as I realize that it was one year ago when I was dropping my oldest child off for her first day of Kindergarten. I remember trying to swallow down the lump in my throat to the point that it physically hurt. Tears burned my eyes as I put on a brave face and smiled and waved and blew kisses and wished her well.

    First Day of Kindergarten

    An entire school year, and an entire summer later, and here we are….about to do this whole thing again. We have spent the past few weeks preparing for this day. Shopping for school supplies, picking out to new shoes, ordering new uniforms, and filling out paperwork…the process has been mostly enjoyable as I see how excited Noelle is to return to her beloved school.

    Last Day of Kindergarten

    But tonight, as I was packing the first of many, many lunches for this year, I thought to myself, “I should put a note in her lunchbox.”

    I didn’t do this last year because…well…she couldn’t read. Every now and then I might slip a post-it with a smiley face or an I Love you, but I never did a note because I knew she couldn’t read.

    But now she can. Now she reads.

    So, with tears in my eyes, I folded up a card and tucked into her pink and purple leopard print lunch box with a sequined tie-dye heart (as you might imagine this was not the one I wanted her to pick, but I’m rollin’ with it…).

    It struck me just how much she couldn’t do last school year, but now she can.

    She couldn’t write her last name, but now she’s got all 11 letters of that sucker down pat.

    She couldn’t tie her shoes, but now she’s a pro.

    She couldn’t remember her address or her phone number (and by that I mean my cell phone number because…home line? what’s that?)…but now she recites them to a peppy little tune she created herself.

    She couldn’t put her head (or chin for that matter) under water in the swimming pool, and now she jumps off the diving board.

    The list could just go on and on and on and on.

    Children are just amazing. They learn despite the circumstances. They succeed despite the failures. They run despite the fatigue. They smile despite the fear.

    We have so much to learn from our children if we would just let them teach us.

    And honestly? It scares me a little to think of what she can’t do right now, but will be able to do by the end of this year.

    But it’s a happy kind of scared. A proud kind of scared. An excited kind of scared.

    I have always said that we aren’t raising children, but we are raising adults, and heading off to school is just one step in that process.

    So here’s to Noelle, and to your child, too….and all their couldn’ts.

  • the one about an accident and a gorilla

    Disclaimer: This is my blog. I save my most heartfelt, from the gut thoughts for this space as opposed to Facebook because I feel like if you clicked on my link and came to my “house,” then you knew what you were about to get yourself into. Just like when my friends come to my real home, they know it is going to look like a bomb exploded, a tornado spun through, and a hurricane just blew over all at once. I’m not sorry that they see it like that because they knocked on my door. Same thing applies here. 

    If you have read my blog for a while now, you know that I write in phases. There are times when the posts keep coming and the inspiration is plenty, and there are times when it is radio silence because my mind can’t download all the thoughts that are pumping through. And that’s ok. You’re here now, and I have my motivation to write, since it has been a couple of weeks.

    It started with a gorilla.

    Yeah, you’re thinking another post about the gorilla in the zoo. (see my disclaimer above) If it bothers you to read something else on the topic, let that red X button be your friend.

    Let me first lay something out.

    I am not an animal lover. I respect animals. I admire animals of great beauty, size, and strength. I think animals are vital to our planet, and I would never wish the intentional harm of an animal that was otherwise doing absolutely nothing wrong. I don’t have pets. I don’t know if I will have pets. Pets to me are something else to clean up after and feed, and we are about to capacity over here with those needs.

    In other words….I don’t want to see anything bad happen to an animal, but I also don’t kiss animals on the mouth.

    Maybe this mindset sets me apart from the large majority of people weighing in on what happened at the Cincinnati Zoo over the weekend, but I am who I am.

    And I am not a perfect parent.

    Not even close.

    I am actually a parent who is not very good about supervising her children 100% of the time.

    There. I said it.

    Call me crazy, but when my girls play with their cousins or friends their age, I tend to let them play. I let them go outside to our 3/4 fenced in back yard, and I let them play on our swing set while I fold laundry or prep dinner. Of course, I check in on them. I watch out the window. I listen for screams. But I don’t watch them like a hawk 100% of the time.

    I know the dangers of children in public places. I also know that there is one of me and three of them, and yes, there are times when my back might be turned for 2 seconds when I am loading child A into the car and children B and C are waiting their turns. I do my best to keep them safe, of course I do. But if I told you that I was able to load and unload a cart full of groceries and three children into their car seats without ever once turning my eyes, head, or back away from them, I would be a liar.

    I have more stories. Some that belong to me and some that belong to my friends and family. And because this world is full of litigious spectators who think they are immune to mistakes and accidents, I am going to use the old elementary standby of “I know someone who” as I share these next moments of parenting failure.

    I know someone who left their sleeping kids in the (not hot) car in the garage or driveway so that the children could get in a good nap.

    I know someone who let their child walk him or herself all the way to the opposite side of the park to use the bathroom by him or herself.

    I know someone who momentarily lost his or her child in a department store and had to be paged to the front to be reunited.

    I know someone who thought his or her toddler was with the other parent in the backyard but was really being brought back up the front yard in the arms of a caring neighbor.

    I know someone whose kids went missing at the beach for several excruciating minutes.

    I know someone who didn’t know he or she was being followed into the pool by his or her child and that child suddenly could no longer touch the bottom and went under.

    I know someone who allowed his or her child, with a large group of other children, to run up ahead of the adults they were with at the zoo.

    I honestly could go on and on. I have seen and done so many things that would be considered incompetent or risky that I lose count.

    Am I proud of it? No.

    Am I human? Hell yes, I am.

    We lock our doors at night. We have smoke detectors and carbon monoxide alarms. They are buckled in appropriate car seats. I make them eat vegetables. They go to well-checks and get immunizations. They wear helmets when they ride their bikes or scooters. They wear life jackets on boats.

    We play by the rules. We respect laws. We do our freaking best to make sure that our kids are safe, healthy, protected, and unharmed.

    But we. are. human.

    We turn our backs when we shouldn’t. We get distracted by conversations or phone calls or thinking about what happened at work that day. We look away.

    And when our most human moments don’t result in an incident that becomes a national media frenzy, we are damn lucky.

    In any one of those stories I shared above, I can see it as a headline of a newspaper. I can hear it as the lead in on the evening news.

    When something scary happens, I use it as a learning experience. I remember how we got into that situation, and I do everything I can to make sure it never happens again. I hug my kids tighter, and I thank God that they were kept safe from harm.

    And I thank God for His grace and forgiveness as I navigate these treacherous waters called parenthood.

    My point in sharing all this is that I am in no position to weigh in on these parents who “allowed” their child to crawl into the gorilla exhibit at the Cincinnati Zoo which lead to the subsequent death of Harambe, the beautiful 17 year old endangered gorilla and the traumatization of the 4 year old child.

    Maybe they told the kid, “Hey, I have an idea! How about you break into this exhibit and go play with that big guy down there. He looks cuddly!”

    Maybe they told the kid, “No. You may not climb that gate. No. You may not get in that bush. No. You may not touch that fence.”

    Maybe, just as the dad was telling the mom, “Hey, we gotta move. This kid is getting really antsy over here,” the child somehow found his way into the enclosure and into harm’s way.

    All of these are maybes because I wasn’t there. And even if I was there, I still wouldn’t be qualified to say what really happened. Not my kid. Not my parenting. Not my place.

    What I can say is that we have a membership to the Indianapolis Zoo. We go several times a year. Many times, I go alone with my three girls, or I meet a friend or family member with their small children. We usually look like a band of gypsies, just roaming around singing and looking for food. I know that it is very difficult to keep an eye on all of them, but we do our best. We take head counts. We run the zone defense. We zig when they zig and we zag when they zag.

    But we are no better than the parents of this child who got into that enclosure. We are no better.

    I have seen moms sit and drink Starbucks and chat while their kids stick their fingers in the monkey cage.

    I have seen dads on their phones checking sports scores while their kids smack the glass and agitate the tigers.

    I am no better than those people, either.

    And neither are you.

    In my opinion, what happened at the Cincinnati Zoo was a tragic accident.

    But these days, accidents no longer exist. Everyone is looking for someone to blame. Blame makes us feel better.

    It’s not good enough to assume that we will learn from our mistakes. We have to humiliate people. We have to make sure the world knows that those people are stupid idiots and we are all better because we have never and would never do something like that.

    (and don’t think for a second I am saying that there’s no use for a legal or justice system– I won’t engage in dialogue about that)

    So, I am here to say that I feel sorry for Harambe the gorilla. I feel sorry that his life was ended due to circumstances beyond his control. I also feel sorry that he was in the zoo to begin with, but that’s a different issue.

    I feel sorry for Harambe’s caretakers. I can’t imagine how hard it has been on them.

    I feel sorry for the parents. They were caught with their pants down and what might have been a near-miss for other parents has become a horrible nightmare for them. I would guess they are embarrassed. I imagine they are ashamed. They might be wondering who their real friends are and if their family will still claim them. I am sure they are relieved their child is alive, and I can bet since they were most likely admiring that gorilla that they feel really bad that he had to die.

    I feel sorry for the child. He is young. He was scared and probably still is. The world has seen the video of him screaming in terror. I am sure he has physical and emotional injuries that will take quite some time (and therapy) to heal.

    But mostly, I feel sorry that he has to grow up in this world where our worst moments, our mistakes, our accidents are publicized, shared, discussed, and memed for the amusement of the worst kind of Monday morning quarterbacks.

  • the one about standing on the other side of Kindergarten

    I’m just pissed, Guys.

    We are a magical 15 calendar days away from the last day of Kindergarten, and, on this day, I screwed up and apparently did not order a lunch for Noelle like I thought I had. Her school handles lunch menus a little differently, and you have to preorder the lunches you would like for the whole month, and then you need to keep track of that on your own calendar at home. We let her eat a school lunch once per week (so she can have normal food like nuggets and hot dogs). I had circled today as a school lunch day, but apparently I was hittin’ the wine a little too hard the night I made the selections and messed it all up. 
    Long story short, I got a phone call from the school while I was at a super rare and secret destination (cough, Target, cough). So, I whipped through the Subway drive-thru at 8:55 a.m., got her a kids meal, and dropped it off at school. 
    The point to all of this is that I was really hoping for an A+ in remembering lunches for the whole year, but I ruined it with such a short time to go. 
    I think, as parents, we have such high expectations for how a school year will go, and are expectations any higher than in Kindergarten? It’s our child’s first official school experience, and we just need the year to be full of rainbows and apples and teachers in denim vests with school bus buttons. 
    We need our kids to be full of enthusiasm and excitement for school. We want them to learn to read and write and ‘rithmetic. We want field trips to the fire station and Christmas concerts and very first best friends.
    But…we forget. We forget that our children are human and the teachers (and parents!) are, too. The newness will wear off. The excitement will ebb and flow. There will be days when the chore of making a lunch seems equal to scrubbing a toilet. You’ll forget to check the papers in the folder. You’ll forget the permission slip. The teacher will stop wearing the denim vest with school bus buttons. Why, Teacher? Why?
    There is no such thing as a perfect school year streak. Someone will drop the ball, and it will probably be you. You’ll dream up a Pin-worthy snack and end up sending a box of Cheerios instead. You’ll want to be a part of every classroom party and end up sending the plates and napkins every time. You’ll no doubt make that walk of shame down the hallway to deliver the forgotten lunch or the cans for the food drive or a coat for your child because the weather man is a liar. It happens to the best of us. I hope.

    Your child will make mistakes, too. She will forget to do her homework or practice reading her book. She will talk when she isn’t supposed to or make a poor choice with a friend. It is all part of the process, in my opinion. We are raising adults, not children, and it’s a marathon, not a sprint. Few skills are mastered in one school year, and it is important to remember that.
    So, here I stand, (nearly) on the other side of Kindergarten, and I am struck by how insanely fast it went and how much my child has grown since August…physically, emotionally, academically, and spiritually (Catholic school for the win!).

    Pat yourselves on the back (and pop a cork), fellow Kindergarten parents. We did it! Even if it wasn’t a perfect year, we did it all the same. 
  • the one about how I don’t need more children

    No. More. Kids.

    This is the message I received loud and clear this morning.

    Done.

    Stop.

    Enough.

    Who told me to stop having kids?

    Well, my own self-doubt. My own self-pity. And probably my own children, under their breaths.

    It was just another epic morning at our house. My husband had to leave early for work, so I was responsible for dropping my Kindergartner off at school and then taking my younger two to preschool with me. Typically, Luke takes my daughter to school, so this was an added responsibility this morning.

    Our dining room was a sea of Cheerios on the floor, a gathering of ants around a piece of dinner from last night, random winter gear that had been dragged out from its drawer in the coat closet, and a stack of school papers that still needed to be sorted, signed, or tossed.

    My oldest needed her hair braided.

    My youngest needed more breakfast.

    My middle needed pants.

    I was barely dressed, teeth narrowly brushed, and, although I desperately needed it, I didn’t have time for concealer under my eyes.

    I could have used a shower, but that whole process would eat up an hour of time we didn’t have, so the trusty ponytail would have to do. Again.

    After a parade of constant mess, constant noise, and constant questions as I was trying to put the finishing touches on the gourmet lunches I was preparing (HA), I lost my cool. Like I do.

    Where is your sight word book? Do you have your lunch box? Help your sister get her shoes on! Please, please, please… go get in the car!

    It hit me in that moment that this family needs no more children.

    You can barely care for the ones you have.

    Only patient, calm mothers deserve lots of children.

    You should get a dog instead. 

    I shook these thoughts just long enough to pull it together and get everyone to school. I have a strict, “No one goes to school angry” policy, because after events like Sandy Hook and other true horror stories, I refuse to let my children leave me for the day with “Hurry up! We’re late!” playing through their minds.

    So, as I opened the van door to let Noelle out, I held her face in my hand, slightly squeezed her freckly cheeks, and kissed over and over again, right in front of the man who helps escort the kids to the door each day. I told her I loved her. And to have a great day. And that I loved her.

    As I pulled around to exit the parking lot and enter the Starbucks line 22 seconds later, I told myself again that I did not need any additional children.

    Does coffee make things better?

    Are you actually going to try harder to have patience?

    Say you’re sorry all you want, but you can’t un-ring the bell.

    That nagging voice of negatives tore away at me for a few more minutes while I listened to the news on the radio.

    Another murder.

    Another kidnapping.

    Another burglary.

    Another presidential candidate threatening this and promising that.

    And then it came to me.

    I may think I don’t need more children, but this world needs more children.

    There are bad guys (and girls) out there. We are inundated with news of the horrible happenings in cities across the globe. We feel fear. We feel anger. We feel sadness.

    But when I look into the eyes of my girls, I feel hopeful.

    Sure, sometimes I say, with a tone of dread in my voice, “I wonder what the world will be like when our kids are grown up.” But there’s something about the way they smile, or laugh, or get excited over the littlest things, or passionately sing a song they love, or pray about what is worrying them, and I realize that these girls have an amazing future ahead of them, and I can’t wait to see who they become.

    I see a cardboard box, and they see an airplane.

    I see a blizzard, and they see Elsa.

    I see a “no way,” and they see an “I’m gonna.”

    They see the good in everyone and everything.

    And coming from teaching children of all ages for nearly 10 years now, I can tell you that most kids are like this.

    When does it change? When do sweet, innocent children turn into murderers or burglars or kidnappers or abusers or users?

    I don’t know exactly, but I think it starts when they lose hope. When they lose their smile. When they lose excitement. When they lose passion. When they lose faith.

    And while I can’t guarantee the type of adults my children will become, I can promise that I will not go one day of my life without helping my children deepen their hope…share their smiles…spread their excitement…fuel their passion…keep the faith.

    That, I guess, is all any of us can do for the children we have…the children we hope to have…the children we teach…the children we care for…the children we see playing down the street.

    Deepen their hope.
    Share their smiles.
    Spread their excitement.
    Fuel their passion.
    Keep the faith.

    (and freak out less in the mornings)

  • the one about the days

    Six years ago, I sat down to eat a fancy dinner with Luke at Olive Garden.

    It would be the last dinner we would have “just the two of us.” Sure, we have been out on dates without the kids since then, but upon the birth of our first child, we realized it would never truly be “just the two of us” again. Not in mind. Not in heart. Not in conversation.

    We were young. We were inexperienced. We were scared. We were excited. We were thrilled to have enough money in our bank account to eat at Olive Garden, given our incomes as 3rd year elementary teacher and 3rd year medical student.

    I remember what I wore. I remember what I ate. I remember that my nose had swollen to cover nearly 1/3 of my face. Pregnancy nose is real.



    I remember waking up after a night of very little sleep like a kid on Christmas morning. We had an induction scheduled at 38 weeks, 2 days, because even back then, my cervix was shitty. I had just watched the episode of Keeping Up with the Kardashians where Kourtney Kardashian literally pulled her own child from her womb in the delivery room, and I was both thoroughly grossed out and secretly motivated to do the same.

    My expectations were a little skewed, to say the least.

    I think I have mentioned this before, but I remember having a very lengthy internal dilemma about whether or not I should remove my underwear when they gave me my hospital gown to change into.

    Silly, New Mama Me. Now a days, I prefer to just go flying onto the labor and delivery floor fully clothed until the last possible second and then POOF. The baby is out. Like magic.

    It takes years to work up to this level of skill, so be patient young grasshoppers.

    Alright, what was I talking about? Oh, yeah. Six years ago, I didn’t know anything about childbirth, taking care of a baby (outside of the robot baby I took care of for one night in high school), or raising a baby to be an awesome human being. I still don’t know much, but I am a little more experienced and a lot more comfortable with it all.

    With each pregnancy, with each child’s birthday, with each passing day, I come a little closer to letting go of perfect idea of motherhood I once put inside my soul and a little closer to accepting the “what is.”

    There are days when I am amazed by my patience and my flexibility. And then there are days when I am pretty sure my head spun around not once but twice mid-argument with a tiny human or two or three.

    There are days when I am proud of my productivity, time management, and organization of our calendars, bills, events, and papers (I didn’t say many days, but there are some days), and then there are days where I watch an undisclosed amount of shows that involve teen moms and housewives and little people.

    It’s called balance.

    Over the past six years, I have learned that there are days and then there are days.

    Whether good or bad, they pass by in a hurry.

    You’ll be shocked you survived day one.

    And then, before you know it, you’ll be standing there on day 2,191, tears rolling down your cheeks because, well…

    because.

    Make the days count.