Year: 2011

Tall Tales from Preschool 4

Sophie is growing up. Yesterday she said she learned about imagination at preschool. When I asked her about her day, she didn’t tell me she was too tired to talk, like she usually does. Instead she said, “Sometimes my imagination gets stuck in my brain and I can’t think.” I asked her to describe imagination to me. She said, “Imagination is like when you have a dream that you don’t want to sleep.” I’m not quite sure I know what that means but, strangely, I think I understand.

So, in a way, I asked her to humor me. When she wouldn’t tell me about her day, and she started talking about her imagination, I asked her about the carousel. Her eyes lit up. “Yes,” she said. “We rode on the carousel.” I then asked her what else she did. This is what she said:

Sophie: “First we climbed a mountain and then we slid down.”

Me: “What did you slide on?”

Sophie: “A swing. Sarin and Addy helped me take the chains off and we sat in them and slid down.”

Me: “And then what did you do?”

Sophie: “We rode in a carousel.”

Me: “What color horse did you ride?”

Sophie: “Pink, purple and then red and then yellow.”

Me: “And then what did you do?”

Sophie: “We went on some swings.”

Me: “And then what?”

Sophie: “Then we went for a picnic at the zoo.”

Me: “What did you eat?”

Sophie: “One turkey sandwich, one cracker with Boursin cheese and one sandwich and one bagel.”

Me: “What animals did you see?”

Sophie: “We saw the zookeeper feeding the monkeys. And we saw the polar bear and right then we went a little farther and then we realized something.” [Note: I’m sure that “realized something” is her quoting Mo Willems’  Knuffle Bunny. All this week she’s insisted on sleeping with Knuffle Buny and taking her Knuffle Bunny stuffed toy to preschool.]

Me: “What?”

Sophie: “Right when I dropped a piece of food a peacock came and ate it.”

Me: “Really?”

Sophie: “Yes. Then we went to Zoey’s house. And then we went inside. We went to all the rooms trying to find Zoey to play but then we realized something. She wasn’t there at all! First we looked up in a tree and she was there but then she ran away and hid in another spot. Then we went to a leaf pile and found her. The end.”

Yes, my little girl is growing up. Not only is she learning what imagination is, but she ended this tall tale with “the end.” Story, reality, imagination and truth are all becoming intertwined and, honestly, it makes me a little sad. I hope she continues her tall tales, if anything, to humor me.

I wrote as she spoke on a piece of folded up paper, during lunch. Today, not knowing what it was, she painted a picture of Zoey on that folded up paper, right over my writing. Zoey had hair, two eyes, a nose, a mouth and legs. The purple dress she added later sort of covered all this up but for a few minutes, at least, it was the first recognizable shape she’s ever drawn, aside from ladders and rainbows.

I’m totally keeping it forever.

“I like nonsense, it wakes up the brain cells. Fantasy is a necessary ingredient in living, it’s a way of looking at life through the wrong end of a telescope. Which is what I do, and that enables you to laugh at life’s realities.” –Theodore Geisel

Accident Free For [0] Days

In yoga, during savasana, my instructor doesn’t simply say “relax.” For if she did, I would think, ‘I’m relaxed’ when really, I’m not. Instead she speaks softly, gently, working her way down our bodies, reminding us to ease tension, eventually, everywhere. At the end, at the point I always think, ‘OK, I’m really relaxed now,’ she says, “Now release your tongue from the roof of your mouth.” Sure enough, it’s always there, the last part of me, tense. Often, I’m tense.

After these three days, I’m in dire need of some savasana.

I do my best to keep my children safe. Our kitchen cabinets are locked. Prescription medicine is unreachable. Bookcases are attached to our walls. I long for the day when I can walk up our stairs without stepping over a gate. Guests do not know how to open our toilet lid. And yet, my children still get sick. They still get hurt.

Around 12:30am Saturday, James woke up struggling to breathe. He had no symptoms prior to this–no runny nose, no fever, no cough. I grabbed him out of his crib and ran downstairs, yelling for Andy who was gaming. He couldn’t hear me, because he had headphones on, so I yelled louder and started banging on the wall. This, by the way, is not how to calm a child who is struggling to breathe. While I was yelling and banging and trying not to panic, I thought of croup. Sophie had croup once. She, too, woke up suddenly, in the middle of the night. But she was able to breathe. Her only symptom was the classic, seal-like cough. James, on the other hand, was panicking. It was cold that night, so I took him outside. I was only wearing a T-shirt, but I wasn’t cold. Rather, I was scared. Andy called the pediatrician on call. He suggested 911 but James wasn’t blue. He was just struggling, a lot. I sang “You Are My Sunshine” to him over and over and over while Andy gathered a couple things. And then Andy and James left, to the closest ER.

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James is fine. He had an x-ray, which was fine. He was given nebulized epinephrine via an oxygen mask and the respiratory tech (according to Andy) was very impressed with how long James allowed the mask on his face (which is surprising to me, as I can’t get him to keep a hat on for the life of me). He was given an oral steroid. And he had to stay for four hours for observation. During this time he enjoyed juice and drawing all over the sheets and Andy’s shirt with a crayon. He finally fell asleep around 4am, and both he and Andy were home around 5:30am.

I took him to see the pediatrician today. His lungs sounded great. Now he has a runny nose, fever, cough and double ear infection, but he can breathe.

I used to think blood on my children wouldn’t bother me nearly as much as choking or struggling to breathe. For blood can be stopped (most of the time) and smiles come easy, especially with princess Band-Aids. It’s the internal stuff that scares me. But then there was tonight.

Sophie had spilled some paint on the kitchen floor and all day long she wanted to use our Swiffer to clean it up. But the boys and the Swiffer do not mix well. So we told her after we put the boys to bed, she could mop the kitchen. (I know this is a phase but it would be most wonderful if she offered to do this for us 10 years from now.) All day she reminded us. Finally, the boys were in bed and she was delighted, Swiffering. Andy and I were in the living room discussing our kids-asleep evening. I had at least a half hour of freelance work to do. All the rooms downstairs needed cleaned. We wanted to watch an episode of “Breaking Bad.” Etc., Etc. Huge crash.

We ran.

Sophie was frozen, stunned. She started to take a step toward us when we noticed glass, everywhere. Her feet were bare.

“STOP!” Andy yelled. “DO NOT MOVE.”

She’s not used to yelling, not like that. Now she was scared. And really wanted us. She started to walk. I ran into the kitchen and grabbed her. I saw a drop of blood on her leg, another on her ankle. We had her sit on the window seat. The bottoms of her feet were covered with the tiniest bits of glass. She started sobbing.

I wanted to sob, too.

There were nine glass bowls, nested, on our kitchen counter. We had used the tenth for dinner, and failed to put the remaining nine away. Imagine someone as short as Sophie using something as tall as a Swiffer. Her hands were low on the pole, which meant the rest of it swung carelessly around the kitchen as she worked. Somehow she must have swung that pole right into the nesting bowls, sending all nine of them flying.

We carried her upstairs and made a bath in which we had her sit on a stool in the tub (so she wouldn’t put pressure on her feet). This worked well. There were, amazingly, no cuts on her feet (just bits of glass that needed washed off) and the two small spots of blood on her leg and ankle healed quickly. It could have been much, much worse.

I know I can’t keep my children in a bubble. But I hate not feeling in control. At first, I was so angry with myself for leaving the bowls on the counter. But then, I looked around our house. All our dining room chairs are on top of our dining room table (to keep the boys from climbing up them, then onto the table, then onto the chandelier, which, unfortunately, has happened). All our kitchen chairs are on top of our kitchen table. The piano bench is on a landing of our stairs. Things are gated. Doors are locked. Breakables have been removed. Little CPR pamphlets I picked up from the class we took are scattered about the house. Our smoke detectors work. We had the house tested for mold. There’s only so much one can do.

Still, when things like this happen, and happen one right after another, I feel like I’m failing at my job. I feel tense, all the time. I agree to three books at bedtime instead of two. I’m more lenient with the Halloween candy.

Andy found the entire 11-11-11 thing to be rather silly but still, I made my wish at 11:11am. It was for health. For everyone. For a long, long time.

I suppose now, while no one is crying, I should focus on my health, my tension. And maybe not even yoga. Maybe just savasana. For the entire hour.

I think it would be so funny to have one of those workplace signs in our house, telling all how many days it’s been since our last accident. The thing is, I’m pretty sure, ours would always say “0.”

“The trouble with always trying to preserve the health of the body is that it is so difficult to do without destroying the health of the mind.”  –G.K. Chesterton

On Kindness

There are many things I wish for my children. Perhaps more than anything, though, I hope for kindness. Other traits, such as intelligence, will make their life easier, yes, but kindness will not only enrich their life, but also the lives of others. And that’s important to me. As such, I was the parent at Sophie’s preschool parent-teacher conference this week who, while being told Sophie “efficiently uses scissors,” asked, “Yes, but is she kind?”

While I strive for kindness at home, Sophie’s 3-1/2. Just today she lost Halloween candy after dinner and was sent to time-out for hitting her brother. I don’t know how she is around other children—preschool is her first experience with a large group of same-aged individuals, without me. I often think of the “Everybody Loves Raymond” episode in which Ray and Debra fear their daughter is being bullied only to discover that she, actually, is the one doing the bullying. Even before I was a parent that episode terrified me.

But then there was tonight, which I will remember more fondly than the “report card” I took home earlier this week. Andy put Sophie to bed. She then told him that she wanted me to do “leave and come back.” (“Leave and come back” is the unfortunate way in which we get her to go to sleep now. One of us stays upstairs and checks in on her at one minute, three minutes, five minutes, 10 minutes and so on until she’s asleep.) She said it was because she loved Andy “this much” (and she held her hands a certain distance) and that she loved me “this much” (and she held her hands farther apart).

Andy came downstairs and told me what happened. I reminded him that she’s 3-1/2.

I went upstairs and Sophie smiled. “One minute,” was all I said. When I came back to tell her “three minutes” she said, “Can you get Daddy for me?”

“Why?” I asked.

“Just because,” she said. “I need to talk to him about something.”

So I got Andy. And I listened, from my bedroom, to my 3-1/2-year-old apologize to her dad without any prompting. She said she was joking and that she loved us both the same.

I was proud of her, of what her teacher said at her at the parent-teacher conference. But I was prouder tonight. (And also a little worried that she inherited the intense guilt I often feel, even when unwarranted.) No one is kind all the time. No one should be. Life calls for meanness, at times, I know that. And I know there will be some tough years, especially the junior high school years, in which meanness easily trumps kindness, even though it shouldn’t. But tonight wasn’t about meanness for something as honorable as justice. Rather, she somehow recognized that her words to her dad could have been interpreted as unkind. And I’ll take that over a check mark in the “developing appropriately” box next to “ability to hold pencil correctly” any day. If she’s mostly kind—if all my children are mostly kind, when it matters most, I will be happy.

“When I was young, I admired clever people. Now that I am old, I admire kind people.” —Abraham Joshua Heschel

Halloween, a Pictorial Essay

Neltner’s Farm

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carving pumpkins

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Fort Thomas Pumpkin Walk

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preschool Halloween party

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Halloween gifts from Grandma and Paw Paw in Baltimore

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Halloween!

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“Nothing on Earth so beautiful as the final haul on Halloween night.” —Steve Almond

Friends

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During a week in which I wasn’t feeling very well Angel, Zoey and Mya came over to take Sophie to the park. It was so kind of them, and Sophie loved getting out of the house. When they left, I watched Angel pushing a double stroller carrying Sophie on her back. And when they came back, Zoey and Sophie were sitting together, so happy. (Thank you, Angel.)

“Some people go to priests; others to poetry; I to my friends.” —Virginia Woolf

OLOG Library Project Benefit Concert

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Sophie and I will be attending this Sunday—I hope you can, too! All the money raised will help go toward a new library and books for children in Belmopan, Belize. For more information about the OLOG Library Project, go here. (And thanks to my friend Tari for the ticket design. Check out her work here!)

“Libraries:  The medicine chest of the soul.” —Library at Thebes, inscription over the door

A Lullaby for Sam

Samuel David Sickmiller was born at 12:37am October 26, 2011. He weighed 8 lbs., 4 oz. and had a head full of black hair. He was born out of love and will remain forever loved, by family and friends.

“Samuel David, forever loved infant son of Mark and Jennifer Sickmiller, lost his life suddenly Oct. 26, 2011. Samuel is the cherished grandson of David R. and Terri Mueller, John and the late Nancy Sickmiller; the great grandson of Gloria T. Mueller and Marjorie Sickmiller; the nephew of Angie and Mark Armbruster, Adam and Danielle Sickmiller, Billy and Michelle Tegge, and Shaun and Amanda Reisenberg. Services were held privately for the family. ‘Unable are the loved to die, for love is immortality.’ —Emily Dickinson”

Sam’s dad, our good friend Mark, wrote a lullaby while our good friend Jen, Sam’s mom, was pregnant. Mark and Jen told me about it. At first, I couldn’t bring myself to listen to it, so sad I was for Jen, Mark and Sam. (Which, in retrospect, seems ridiculous when recognizing the strength Jen possessed to go through labor, knowing the outcome, and recognizing the strength both Mark and Jen have had to wake up in the morning to care for their beautiful golden retrievers, to eat, to put socks on, to breathe. They are two of the strongest people I know.)

A few days later, at around 3am, I woke suddenly from a hard sleep to one of the most beautiful songs I’ve ever heard. Andy, who was having trouble sleeping that night, was listening to it. Even never having heard it before I knew immediately that it was Sam’s lullaby. It is beautiful. And it is a most fitting tribute to wonderful Baby Sam.

I asked Jen and Mark if I could share it. They said yes. I wish the whole world could hear it. Because to listen to it is to listen to love.

You may listen to it here.

I can’t think of a more fitting quote than to end this post with the one Jen and Mark chose for Sam’s obituary. It holds such great truth. Sam, you are loved. By many.

“Unable are the loved to die, for love is immortality.” —Emily Dickinson

Sophie, While Eating Pomegranate Seeds

Sophie: “Look at me!”

Me: “What?”

Sophie: “I have a seed stuck in my nose!”

Me: “What?! Take it out! It could get stuck!”

Sophie: “No it won’t.”

To prove this, she then takes it out. And eats it.

“Children are a great comfort in your old age—and they help you reach it faster, too.” —Lionel Kauffman

Sophie’s Tree

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This is Sophie’s tree. We love it because, from the front porch, it blocks the view of the gas station across the street. And it’s a late bloomer, providing lovely little white flowers in June.

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Sophie loves it because the branches are perfect for climbing. I had a tree like that when I was girl, in my front yard. It is one of my strongest memories from childhood—sitting on the same branch, almost every day, shaking the branches above me as if they were puppets. I had names for them. I made up stories about them. I spent many hours up in that tree. It must be in my blood. And Sophie’s blood. For my mom recently said she spent hours in a tree too, as a child, reading books. Homeowners who would like to add new trees in their yard may consider hiring a tree planting expert.

I sometimes miss those parts of childhood, the parts in which it is perfectly normal and acceptable to sit in a tree for no other reason than to sit in a tree. One summer evening, at our old house, before children, I decided on a whim to climb one of the evergreens in our backyard. Climbing up was easy. Climbing down, not so much. I was stuck—high up stuck. I sat in that tree for a long time thinking surely Andy would come out looking for me. But I guess it never occurred to him that his 20something wife might decide on a whim to climb an evergreen tree in our backyard and get herself stuck. So I had to yell. Thankfully Andy heard me yelling and not a neighbor. He helped me down. Yes, the love of trees runs deep in this family. Of course, when trees become too large, damaged, or unsafe near homes, professional services like tree removal Mernda can help homeowners manage their landscapes safely while still appreciating the beauty trees bring to a yard. We hire a professional landscaper to help us with smart seasonal yard prep for changing Texas weather.

Trees can enhance a home’s curb appeal but if there are rotten or dying trees in your yard, they may no longer be beneficial. In this case, an emergency tree removal service may be required.

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On this particular day it was so windy, up in Sophie’s tree.

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I love the look of wonderment. I miss that.

“To the great tree-loving fraternity we belong. We love trees with universal and unfeigned love, and all things that do grow under them or around them—the whole leaf and root tribe.” —Henry Ward Beecher

A Perfect(?) Fall Afternoon

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I have been purposefully neglectful about updating my blog. As much as I love my children I haven’t felt much like writing about them upon learning the loss two dear friends of mine have endured. I know it’s cliché to talk about hearts aching but that’s exactly what mine has been doing all week—no parent should outlive their child.

And this is what I struggle with: Why am I allowed a perfect fall afternoon with my three beautiful children while others must suffer so much? Why do bad things happen to good people? Why must there be tragedy, suffering and loss? How is it possible—and right—that while something beautiful is happening something tragic is as well? At any given second someone, somewhere is experiencing the most profound happiness. And at any given second someone, somewhere, is experiencing the most unimaginable sorrow. Why must this be so?

I suppose the answer is something along the lines of better appreciating happiness because sadness exists. And yet, my heart is so heavy. Life can be so unfair, so fantastic, so beautiful, so unkind. I have a difficult time accepting this, understanding this. And so I try to focus on the good—the perfect, sunny, blue-sky, falling leaves, pinwheel-perfect autumn days. The kind meant for falling into a leaf pile and chalking on the sidewalk and finding snake skin and collecting beautiful leaves and fighting your brother for a turn on the rocking chair and throwing your beautiful leaves in the air. And yet. And yet. And yet. Sometimes, some days, it’s too hard. The world’s sadness haunts me.

“When you are sorrowful look again in your heart, and you shall see that in truth you are weeping for that which has been your delight.” —Kahlil Gibran