“Our brothers and sisters are there with us from the dawn of our personal stories to the inevitable dusk.” —Susan Scarf Merrell
Month: December 2010
Thumb Sucker
Sophie, the Princess
Her self-made princess costume includes a tutu, Amish bonnet, fake jewels, Mardi Gras beads, dinosaur hands and water shoes. She also has a blue, sequin, star-shaped wand, which she runs around the house waving while saying, “magical! magical!”.
Sometimes she mixes it up with a black silk cat tail and sunglasses.
“Just around the corner in every woman’s mind – is a lovely dress, a wonderful suit, or entire costume which will make an enchanting new creature of her.” —Wilhela Cushman
Thanksgiving in Baltimore
This year we drove to Baltimore for Thanksgiving, to spend it with Andy’s parents, Liz and Aunt Fran. What should have been an eight-hour drive one way took us 12. But if you think about it—that’s not that bad, considering every stop required feeding two adults and a toddler, bottle feeding two babies, changing three diapers (which usually meant taking the kids, one by one, into a public bathroom) and then convincing three children who simply wanted to play and stretch to get back into their car seats. Things that made the drive more bearable: I had a small bag of “treats” (stickers, books, small dolls, etc.) to give to Sophie when she started getting antsy. (Thanks to my Aunt Alise for this idea!) To save time I used a battery-powered breast pump, while riding in the car, with a nursing cover to hide myself from passing semi trucks. We caved and bought Sophie a portable DVD player—however we’ve limited it to long trips only.
The drive there was great. The drive back was much more difficult because of toll roads (lack of exits) and traffic. Still, it was worth it to spend a great holiday with family.
table set for Thanksgiving dinner
Sophie, unfortunately, fell asleep minutes before dinner. Therefore she wasn’t the happiest of children when it came time to wake her up to eat.
Liz, Jill, Andy, Owen and Sophie
Marty and Fran
holding baby James
Grandma and Owen
Sophie modeling the adorable apron Great Aunt Fran made for her
Sophie riding a tricycle—with pedals!—for the first time
Sophie loved playing soccer in the large entry
the boys enjoying their first fire
matching fathers and sons
We had a very nice dinner with Marty’s cousin, his wife, Sandra, and their beautiful daughter, Rachel (Sophie loved having a girl close to her age to play with that night).
the boys, not sleeping (I think it’s close to midnight in this picture)
We visited the National Aquarium—Sophie loved the dolphin show.
Sophie opening a present—They Might Be Giants’ Here Comes Science CD and DVD—from Aunt Lizzie
James napping
“This is the finest measure of thanksgiving: a thankfulness that springs from love.” —William C. Skeath
11th OSU Thanksgiving
Thanks to Megan Wysocki for these amazing photos. It was so great seeing everyone—my only wish is that we all lived closer to one another.
“We can only be said to be alive in those moments when our hearts are conscious of our treasures.” —Thornton Wilder
Pop Pop’s Birthday
Sophie helping Nini ice the cake …
and lick the spoon.
Lighting the candles …
and blowing out the candles! Yes, Sophie’s pant-less. (Mom forgot a change of clothes.)
a birthday kiss
Presents! Sophie initially insisted on getting Pop Pop a snow globe (her gift of choice for everyone) but upon learning that his favorite animal is the giraffe, she picked out a cute beaded one instead.
Happy birthday, Dad! And thank you, for never giving up that role, no matter how old I get. (I’m thinking about today how, even before setting foot in our front door to help us out with the kids, you scraped our snow-covered car, not because we asked but because you simply saw that it needed to be done.)
“He didn’t tell me how to live; he lived, and let me watch him do it.” —Clarence Budington Kelland
Holding on to ABCs
Today has been a at-one-point-I-was-curled-up-in-a-tight-ball-on-the-bathroom-rug-with-my-face-buried-in-my-hands-out-of-sheer-frustration day. I have a cold. Sophie may or may not have a cold—but she’s coughing constantly. Owen has a runny nose and is teething.
Despite the many holiday and just-general-life related things I have on my to-do list at the moment, I only gave myself three goals for today: Visit friends who recently had a baby, start (and finish) a freelance editing assignment, and clean up/decorate the outside of the house for Christmas.
We couldn’t visit our friends because of the colds and cough. The editing work is taking forever because I tried to do it at home, in my bed, instead of at a coffee shop (interruptions included crying babies; requests to watch computer/bounce on the bed/play hide-and-seek/use my red pen to help me “draw”; demands for more pumped milk (the boys eat so much now!); and a cat who loves to rub her entire body across my face while I’m trying to read). Finally, we couldn’t find our six huge garbage bags filled with pre-lit fake garland for our front porch (we checked the entire house, basement to attic, several times) so decorating the outside of the house also involved an expensive to trip to Lowes. (And by the time I came back with the lights it was getting too dark to put them all up so right now we have big, ceramic lights wrapped around our porch railing only and half of them, for some reason, don’t work. Oh, and we still have our pumpkins on the porch from Halloween—classy.)
So I’m frustrated. And cranky. And stuffy and germy and hungry and annoyed and, at times, acting very much like a baby.
But I’m back in bed, editing. Hoping to make progress with something today.
And then Sophie yells, “Mom-umm!”
It’s 10:30pm.
Her bedtime is 8pm.
I too-aggressively throw down my editing work and, in the process, manage to mark up our sheets with my red pen. I walk over to the gate in front of her bedroom door.
“What, Sophie?” I say not-at-all pleasantly.
“Can you do ABCs on my back?”
I soften. My body softens. My brain softens. My whole being softens. (How do kids do that?)
“One time,” I say. “I mean it. Just one time and then you have to go to sleep. It’s way past your bedtime.”
She smiles and skitters back into bed. And then she looks at me, eyes huge and says, “Can you do it through the hole in my back?”
And that’s when I melt. That’s when I cave. That’s when I transform from on-the-verge-of-having-a-mental-breakdown mother to normal, loving, should-be-wearing-an-apron-and-have-chocolate-chip-cookies-baking-in-the-oven mother.
The hole that she’s referring to is the neckline of her footed pajamas. She insists I trace the alphabet on her bare skin instead of over the thick flannel fabric covering her back. And there’s just something about that that’s so sweet to me, so simple and innocent and easy to provide.
And so I trace. The whole alphabet, while singing the letters, slowly. I pull my hand out of the “hole in her back” and rub her entire back, over the thick, flannel fabric, and sing the little song at the end.
I tuck her in.
And the moment is over.
She’s mad because while tucking her in, I moved one of her picture books from the left side of the bed to the right. And she wanted to pull her sheet and quilt up over her feet. How dare I do it for her! And when I pull the sheet and quilt back down so she can do it herself she’s upset because it’s not exactly as it was before. She’s yelling, “Like this, Mommy! Like this!” while stretching and pulling and shoving folds of fabric here and there. I try to fix it. But of course I’m doing it all wrong. I stop. Straighten. Take a deep breath. I give her Knuffle Bunny to sleep with. She throws him aside. I say goodnight. She plops her head on her pillow and squeezes her eyelids shut, clearly irritated with me. I say “I love you,” reattach her gate and close her door.
It’s now after 1am. Twenty minutes ago Owen woke up crying, which woke up James. I bounced Owen around the living room while James screamed in the pack-n-play while Andy made bottles with the little bit of milk we still had in the fridge. Andy then fed both boys while I pumped more milk. I ran downstairs with the fresh milk; James had fallen asleep, Owen was still hungry. I just put James to bed, although he woke up while being transported (I still haven’t learned where all the floor creaks are in our new house) so who knows what will happen in the next 10 minutes. Oh, and I’m still not done with my editing assignment, which is due tomorrow.
I know, though, when I look back on this time, I won’t immediately think of my face buried into my hands or the surprising amount of anger I felt upon hearing my daughter call me at 10:30pm or the frustration with not getting anything accomplished before 2am today. Instead, I’ll think of tracing the alphabet on Sophie’s back. And how happy that made her.
I know this to be true because it’s how I remember Sophie a year-and-a-half ago. When I think of Sophie as a baby I don’t immediately think of the three-hour bedtime routines or the demands to nurse constantly or the refusal to eat jarred baby food. Instead, I remember the zerberts and resulting laughter, the weight of her body on my chest, the way she could stare so long at wind-blown leaves.
So I’ll take our little ABC moment and hold it dear as I go back to blowing my nose, as I go back to editing, as I go back to staring at the monitor and thinking, Please don’t wake up. Because not only was that ABC moment a moment I know I’ll remember years from now, it’s also a moment that got me through today—kept me from losing my mind, my self, entirely. I rely on moments like that daily. I suspect most parents do.
“Happiness is having a scratch for every itch.” —Ogden Nash
Rolling Into Each Other
Friends
Sophie and Zoey have longed played together, but now they’re old enough to play alone together. And they talk to each other. They laugh at and with each other. They debate and share and yell and don’t share and fall and run and cry and always hug each other when they leave. And no matter how well or not well they got along with each other the last time, they often ask for each other—and they’re always so excited to see each other. I love it.
“I always felt that the great high privilege, relief and comfort of friendship was that one had to explain nothing.” —Katherine Mansfield











































