Friday, October 19, 2012

More Mother.


I think I’ve experienced some kind of motherly right of passage, something akin to the first day of kindergarten, the first ER visit or taking your oldest to college.

Last night was Joshua’s last jr. high football game.

Jim had always said, “My son will play football.” The first toy he bought when we first ever found out I was pregnant was a stuffed football rattle. Of course, when the first child turned out to be Rebecca, he saved it for the next kid. And when that beautiful little boy emerged, I said, “My son will not play football; it’s too dangerous. People get hurt. It’s not worth it.” And we put off the discussion until he was older. But when he was in third grade, he played flag football. No biggie. And the next year, he got pads and played tackle. And the kids were little, and the team was cute. And how hurt could they really get? And Joshua loved it. He worked hard, and he excelled. He became a valuable player. Over the years, he and his dad have shared father/son moments over the game, talking through plays, recapping each event. And I watched this son and his passion, and I supported it.  I didn’t give much more thought to getting hurt. I gave it to God. This boy, this first-born son, is ALL boy. He plays football. And I’m proud of him.

So there we were at his last football game of the season. His last 8th grade game. They’ve had a great season – only lost one game. Joshua’s played well. He loves to hit; loves to tackle; loves to take the other team down.

And then I saw the other team. They were huge. I mean gigantic. At least four of them were bigger than my husband. They looked like they’d been held back a year. Or two. And then I took a look at our wiry jr. high team. It was David and Goliath, right there on the field. They started playing, and our players went down, one by one – Joshua’s best friend – our star running back – got a concussion. Another kid got a concussion. Someone else went out. Still, we kept playing. Joshua played well! Recovered the ball, had two amazing sacks, an awesome run, and his big moment – a touchdown!! The scores grew. We hung in. They had 50. We were at 18.

In the final quarter, Joshua got the ball and disappeared under a pile of big, red-and-white Goliaths. And when they all got up, Joshua was still down. The teams took a knee, and the coaches went out. And the trainer went out. And time stopped. There was my baby, lying out there on the field. He rolled in pain. They checked him out. They worked on him. For at least five minutes, the teams knelt.  For at least five minutes I prayed. The stands were quiet, and my eyes were glued on the boy in the middle of the field. What a helpless moment.  And finally one leg moved. And then the other. And at the end of eternity, he was up. But they CARRIED him off the field, legs dangling. I stood to go meet him. My friend and my husband kept me in the stands. Apparently it’s not acceptable to go rushing to your son if he’s not been wheeled off the field.

The game continued I suppose, not that I paid too much attention. (Final score 50-24, I hear.) The other team showed no mercy – with a huge score differential, they kept their gigantic starters in, still played all the way 'til the end - until the clock ran out, risking even more injury. And the trainer kept working with Joshua, stretching, turning, checking range of motion. In the end, he was ok – what he thought was his hip popping, breaking? Was more likely movement of the sacrum. He is sore today. He moves slowly. If he still struggles in a couple of days, we will get an x-ray. But he is ok.

I, on the other hand, am somehow more mother, for motherhood seems to be a series of “letting go’s.” Of relinquishing control. Of realizing that you are helpless to control their lives, heal their hurts and keep them in the nest. Of trusting the child of your heart to his Creator and His plan. Of releasing them - and watching them grow.

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Stopping to Smell the Roses

I know...it's cliche. But it's still important. We go through life day after day, month after month, falling into patterns - sometimes good, sometimes not so good. And we forget. We forget to look at what God has given us. We forget to appreciate the gifts. To take time to deviate from what's normal and what's expected. And then something happens.

For us, it was simple. We woke up one morning and my precious little one had a swollen face. It was hugely swollen. She was unrecognizable. I thought - she has strep! Because that's how this little one presents with strep - she gets scarlet fever on her face. And I took her in to the doctor's office where they ran a strep test, and it came back negative. What?!? I KNOW she has strep. So they sent us to the lab to double check. But in the meantime, she looked so pathetic. It's true, she felt fine! But she looked pathetic. And in that day of nothing is normal, I was reminded of the treasure that I have. The precious child. Precious children. And so we threw the rest of the day to the wind. We played family games. We snuggled. We read books. I dropped her brother off at dance. And then, on this gorgeous, unexpected spring day, we went to pick him up - on foot. Bethany ran ahead, jumping from tree to tree. We met her brother, who was surprised when he couldn't find the car. And delighted to walk on such a beautiful day, with the dog, and the sister with the swollen face, and the mother who was smiling and said yes to going out for ice cream.

I'm not a fan of illness. I'm not a fan of swollen faces. But I recognize that sometimes, God uses the situations around us to remind us of the gifts He's given. The treasures we sometimes take for granted. He reminds us that we need to stop. And smell the roses.

Monday, January 31, 2011

Bethany's take on '80's styles...

Bethany: Mom, how does my hair look?
Me: Tangly!!
Bethany: Good - it's supposed to look tangly! I'm in the show - Footloose!!

Thursday, January 20, 2011

A Tribute to My Dad

This blog has been rather undercover, but I'm afraid with this post, I'm going public - because this is the kind of post that is written, therapeutically, for public consumption, as they say. My blog is now out of the bag.

Today has been an absolutely wretched day. I didn't figure out why until after lunch, when I realized it was my dad's birthday. Once I realized why I kept bursting into tears, I have cried pretty much solid ever since. I've tried everything to avoid dealing with it - made phone calls, gone shopping, played Angry Birds, cleaned, but the grief has chased me down. It seems very odd to me, because this is the twentieth birthday my father has NOT celebrated. Yes, he has been gone twenty years, and I am still crying. Which made me wonder - it's not like this every year. WHY is it like this THIS year? And as I've analyzed it, I realize there are several reasons:

1. This is the first year I've actually had to deal with the fact that I am a 41-year old orphan. Both my parents are gone. This is odd, indeed. In addition, my sister is gone. And my aunt. Pretty much, the adult blood-relatives who really knew my dad are gone.
2.This leaves me with the burden of being the memory-bearer. When we lose someone, we say, "but their memory lives on" and it does. We have the privilege of our memories, and of sharing our memories with others who knew our loved one. But right now, I AM the memory-bearer.

And that feels like a heavy, heavy burden. So, in the spirit of bearing those memories, I think I need to share them. Because although it's been 20 years, I love my dad. and I miss my dad, and I remember my dad.

I remember, in no particular order:
  • the way he called me Miscilla
  • he never owned a pair of jeans
  • or a pair of sneakers
  • so he mowed the grass in athletic shorts, dark socks and Hush Puppies
  • all his pants were polyester. Even when it wasn't in style
  • my mother made him buy a pink suit. And he wore it.
  •  he was the most organized, disorganized person I've ever known - don't mess with the 20 piles of papers on the floor of his office!
  • the way his gigantic key ring jangled so you could hear him coming from a mile away
  • that he was the best piano player I've ever heard. The only person I know who comes close to playing with the kind of power my dad did is Michael Yuen, and I love to hear him play.
  • and he was the best sight-reader EVER. He practiced almost nothing, but could play almost anything.
  • we spent hours playing music together - he would spoil me by buying me music, and then he would accompany me on random Sunday afternoons while I played viola. Or sang. But playing viola was my favorite. (And this is why I love to sight-read, lol)
  • I was always amazed when I watched him play the organ. Feet? And hands? And so many stops? It was a lot for a five-year old to take in.
  • He had a piano-playing face - he always dropped his jaw when he played the piano.
  • he loved Chinese food, and whenever my mother went out of town, we went out for Chinese, 'cause she hated it.
  • And he loved Mexican, 'cause he had a Mexican housekeeper. and he loved avocados and orange juice and orange juice and sprite.
  • he had no idea how to dish a small bowl of ice cream.
  • he NEVER cooked. (Was outlawed from the kitchen after a pancake-making debacle.)
  • he always wanted to take me hiking in Yosemite, but we never got there
  • he was an amazing calligrapher
  • but honestly, no one could read his handwriting. (I can't believe I actually said that.)
  • he outlawed ballpoint pens in our house - they're too hard to control and make writing illegible - felt tip pens or fountain pens only.
  • there was no contemporary music in our house. Classical only. Or show-tunes. Though I finally got him to listen to Howard Jones. Funny.
  • he was principled to a fault
  • I mean, really, how many people start a private school because they don't want to put their child through the school system?
  • he was a complete workaholic, but that doesn't mean I don't have great memories.
  • in fact, he would make a beeline to his office, toothbrush in his mouth, so he didn't waste his toothbrushing time. 
Perhaps that's enough random memories. Thanks for letting me spew at any of you who were brave enough to hang in this long. Hang on to the memories of those you hold close to your heart, and be sure to intentionally create memories along the way!

Friday, December 3, 2010

Stuck in the '80's...

So in my last post, I blogged about my favorite Advent books. This post then became a Bright Ideas Press post, and there, we held a contest and offered one to a lucky reader. Although that has been done on this blog many times before, I have never done it. This was a learning experience for me. So I sit at my computer in Michigan on Thursday morning to announce the winner. But how do I do this? It's on a computer screen! Do I just send the mouse whizzing down the page and see where it stops? I dunno. Must call Maggie. Maggie says, "When we do this in the office, we put numbers or names on slips of paper in a hat. And then once we have a winner, there's some way to get the e-mail address of that person." OK, I say. So I pull out my little pad of paper, cut up strips, write names on each fold them up, find something to put them in (a crystal bowl that was a wedding gift - nothing but the best around here) and call my five year old over to draw a name. Not a great choice. She wants to know what she's doing. So in a great homeschool moment, I have to expand her concept of the Internet, explain Bright Ideas, the blog, the concept that people can comment on the blog, the contest, and the way we have to draw names for the winners of the contest. 20 minutes later we were drawing a winner.

Ok. Now that I have a winner, I have to call Tyler to figure out what to do next. How do I get their e-mail address to notify, what's the best way to get the info onto the blog? Tyler says, "Wait, what was the contest deadline? I have a bunch of unapproved comments here. We need to draw again." And suddenly, through the magic of the web, I have ten more entries that need to be added to my crystal bowl. I start snipping my paper schnibbles so I can write the new names on them and that brilliant computer guru, Tyler, says...wait for it..."Would you like me to randomly generate a number between 1 and 27." And in three seconds, we had a new winner. Good thing SOMEONE at Bright Ideas Press is living in the 21st century. It's not me...I'm stuck in the '80's.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Advent takes me by surprise every year.

It's true. You'd think I'd know by now that advent comes right on the heels of Thanksgiving every year, but I think because so many grinches are trying so hard to stave off the Christmas songs and Christmas displays, I feel guilty thinking about Christmas any time before Turkey Day. And then THWAP! It's Advent. So today, as I was thinking about the Advent readings that we should have started yesterday, I pulled out my favorites, which were written by Arnold Ytreeide. Currently a series of three, with another on the way, the first book is called Jotham's Journey, the second is Bartholomew's Passage and the third is Tabitha's Travels. What I LOVE about these is that they are advent readings, but sooo much more than that! They are actually a work of fiction - a short novel to read aloud to the family, a chapter a day. Yet woven into EACH day is a message about advent, which points the reader toward Christ. Unlike other advent readings, where you may miss a day and feel the need to catch up and read two unrelated messages, with these books, if you get behind (which you might not, because the kids BEG to hear the story), catching up is a joy - it's like simply reading more chapters of a well-loved book. If there's any problem with these books, it's that you have to tell the kids they MUST wait until tomorrow - you can't read ahead! It wasn't until I found these books that our family really found success with our advent readings. And to tell the truth, I ordered Tabitha's Travels from Amazon yesterday, which means it won't get here until Wednesday, so I'll be starting three days behind. But am I worried? Naaahhh...

So, I'm pulling out the blog...

...would someone please (I don't hold out much hope - I haven't publicized this blog) remind me that in the past I was a good blogger!! I had a BUNCH of blog posts. On a different site. The fact that I've logged five posts in the past two years is...yes...well...anyway...

Honestly, I think I fell off the blogging wagon when Facebook took over my life. Did I say took over? I meant entered. Reallly. I think I thought I would use the "Notes" on there as blog posts. And I did. A bit. But as the result of Facebook, the thoughts I have that are fit for public consumption have moved from paragraphs and stories to pithy one-liners that can fit in Facebook statuses. So. There's my excuse.

I'm pulling the blog back out (I HOPE I'm pulling the blog back out) because my fantastic company, Bright Ideas Press (which you can visit at Bright Ideas Press.com - shameless plug) has its own blog, and they would like their employees to blog. Only, I feel this insane amount of pressure to have to blog appropriately, because there I'm a representative of the company. I'm queen of negative self-talk and whenever I start to write something, I can come up with all kinds of reasons that it shouldn't be posted on that site. I sorta feel like when I blog there, it should come with some disclaimer like, "the opinions expressed by this blogger do not necessarily reflect those held by the company at large." So I'm thinking that if I start blogging again here, I can get my creative juices going again - something longer than quippy FB statuses - and perhaps some of it will end up being useful for BIP's blog.  Anyone up for the ride?