7 Quick Takes Friday (Vol. 11)

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— 1 —

A childhood friend posted a link to this painting on my Facebook Timeline the other day, saying that it reminded her of a young me:

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Certainly, I’m very flattered by the comparison. (Thanks, Sarah!) Especially after that whole weight insecurity thing. But it also gave me a little laugh, because it reminded me of an exchange I had my freshman year of college with a classmate whom I didn’t know well at the time. It went something like this:

Her: (From halfway across a public space at the college, with a few other people milling around) “You know, Julie, you look like an old painting.”
Me:
Her: “I mean, in a good way – you know, the old Flemish masters and stuff.”
Me: “Oh, thanks. That’s… that’s very nice of you.”
Me: (Internally) “I’m 18 years old and I was just compared to an old painting. Not exactly what I was going for. But… those paintings are really very beautiful… I’ll take it.”

— 2 —

Can you believe that it’s mid-August and my boys and I were all wearing long pants and long-sleeved shirts to the park the other evening? And we were comfortable? Crazy stuff. It should be, like 100 degrees and oppressively muggy right now. But instead we’ve got this gloriousness:

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Clear and cool (I don’t know, maybe it was in the low ‘70’s while we were out?), with this lovely low-humidity thing going on. I know that plenty of you want some more beach/pool weather before the summer’s out, but I’m really enjoying this little October preview. I mean, we got to go to the park without being terrorized by mosquitos! In August!

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— 3 —

Yesterday my friends Betsy and Kristina came over for a little playdate and we sang to our four little boys who celebrate summer(ish) birthdays. Between the three of us we have two boys who just turned three, two who just (about) turned two… and then two more who will turn one in about six months’ time. Isn’t fun to have little ones who pair off like that? And aren’t they just so darned cute?

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— 4 —

One of my Facebook friends, a Lutheran minister with whom I’ve been friends since we were children, posted the following the other day:

Tonight I am supremely grateful for the gift of reconciliation, and for the transformative power of forgiveness.

I don’t know her post’s context (and I hope she won’t mind me stealing it!), but I think it bears remembering. How often do we really think about reconciliation and forgiveness? Perhaps we Catholics think of it in the context of the Sacrament of Reconciliation, but do we think of it when it comes to our relationships with the people in our lives? Do we think of it in a broader sense, insofar as it relates to our differences and difficulties with people of other communities, faiths, nations, etc.?

— 5 —

Speaking of differences and difficulties, can we just stop for a moment and say a prayer for the people of Egypt? And perhaps another one for the Egyptians who have been targeted for their Coptic Christian faith? More than 600 people were killed on Wednesday, thousands were injured, important Coptic churches were destroyed… Such sadness, such heartache, such a waste. Let’s not let it go by unacknowledged.

— 6 —

Two of my dearest friends are on the cusp of welcoming their second little boy into their families. (And coincidentally, they have both chosen the same first name for their sons – which I won’t write here, because I can’t remember whether they’ve announced it publicly!) My best friend Catey is due to have her baby boy this weekend or the beginning of next week. My friend Diana will leave this weekend with her family to fly to South Korea to adopt their newest little guy. It’s been interesting to talk with them both over the many months they have been awaiting their sons’ arrival, noting the similarities between pregnancy and the adoption process.

There is, of course, the eagerness to become pregnant or to be matched with a child in the first place. There is anxiety over whether the pregnancy will last and be healthy, whether the adoption will proceed successfully. Sometimes there are setbacks; there are nearly always discomforts. But there is also an abiding love for the child in question and an eagerness to take him into your arms, your home, your life. As you near the end of your wait, fear creeps in: Will all go according to plan? Will this child really arrive safely? Will we be able to bring him home? How will we all (perhaps especially our older child) adjust to having a new member of the family? How will our new child adjust to us?

Here’s to both of you, Catey and Diana. Here’s an anticipatory little “Congratulations!” Here’s a pat on the back for a job very well done, a big hug, a wish of good luck, and many prayers. You are both fabulous mothers to your darling little guys and you’ll be fabulous mothers to their very lucky little brothers too. I send gobs of love to you and your families.

— 7 —

As I do so many weeks, I’m going to wrap up with some humor courtesy of my three-year-old:

(Pointing at his little brother) “Dat’s my chicken. He’s a superhero wit me.”

After I realized that he’d just leapt from the coffee table onto the bare hardwood floor, some five feet away:
Me: “WHAT are you DOING?!? You are not allowed on the table! You are not allowed to jump off it!”
Him: “But I want to fwy yike a bird!”
Me: “You are NOT a bird, you are a HUMAN! You cannot fly!”
Him: “I just pwetendin’ be a bird. I pwetendin’ be a woodpepper.”

“I’m a farmer who takes care of cows! And bunnies, too. And twees in da forest.”

Him: “I’m not a big kid! I’m a gwown-up!”
Me: “You’re not a grown-up until you’re, like, twenty. You are only three.”
Him: “I NOT free!”
Me: “Well then, how old are you?”
Him: “Twenty.”

“I’m makin’ sure I’m healfy and safe!”

After I walked into the family room in response to his little brother’s screams: “I’d better go in time out.”

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Now go see Jen and the rest of the Quick Takes Crew!

Monday Morning Miscellany (Vol. 4)

— 1 —

Remember when I wrote about my Friends Who Blog a couple of weeks ago? Well, my friend Mary, this lovely lady:

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Sorry it’s fuzzy. Cell phone pic.

She has finally launched her blog. It’s called Quite Contrary. (Get it? Isn’t that cute?) Mary is a former journalist and communications professional, so it pretty much goes without saying that she’s a talented writer. She’s also super smart and observant and savvy, so she’s an excellent person to talk to on the Topics of Great Importance I mentioned here. And Mary is also a wonderful mother to her two lovely little girls. (Whom I won’t deny having my eye on for my little guys someday.) Wink, wink.

I hope you’ll go pay her a visit!

— 2 —

Any of you who are Conversion Diary readers likely already know about the gem of blog Jen shared last week: Mama Knows, Honeychild. If you aren’t, or if you somehow missed her recommendation, oh my gosh, you have to check it out. It’s the funniest thing I’ve come across in a long time. I’m not a “laugh out loud” kind of person, but I totally was LOL’ing while I read Heather’s posts. The blog is a hilarious take on motherhood, family life, trying to live the Catholic faith and instill it in your children, etc. Oh, and it’s illustrated with the blogger’s own stick figure drawings, which are as if not more funny than the writing itself. Case in point:

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The fruits of an over-active imagination, an impending beach vacation, and Shark Week on TV.

— 3 —

Speaking of gems, last week I stumbled onto another, very different kind of blog gem. Nella at Is There McDonald’s in Heaven? commented on my Motherhood On The Kitchen Floor post, so I checked out her blog. I read one post, then another, then came back for another, and before I knew it, I’d read just about her entire blog. (She started it in April.)

Earlier this year, Nella figured out that she had cancer around the same time she discovered she was pregnant with her sixth child. She was formally diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma when she was 19 weeks pregnant. So, understandably, she writes about the challenges of having cancer. And the challenges of having cancer while pregnant. With five older children to care for. Now that her baby has been born, she’s writing about the challenges of having a premie in the NICU. (And, family with lots of NICU experience, it looks like Nella could use some words of comfort on that count. Comment on her blog if you have any wisdom to share with her.)

I tell you, she seems like quite a lady. Not only is she super open and honest about the whole thing, but she’s so funny. How in the world can anyone make cancer treatment seem funny? Like this:

It’s easy as humans to forget that we are animals.  Well let me tell you, regardless of the fact that you intellectually understand that this procedure will lead to life saving information, regardless of the fact that you give your consent, and regardless of the fact that the whole situation is dressed up with civilized medical behavior, when someone is coming at your outstretched neck with a sharp object…well, everything deep in side the most primordial core of your being starts screaming out “AWWW HELLZZ NO!!!”.  My primordial core is urban.  Anyhoo, you’d be amazed how perplexing it is to medical professionals that a normal person might find being stabbed in the neck, even with your consent, a tad disconcerting.  Seriously doctor, it’s not personal, I’m sure you’re very competent and compassionate, BUT YOU ARE STABBING ME IN THE NECK.  Now lest you think I was flopping around like a fish on the table screaming for my Mom, I was not.  I have birthed 5 children.  4 of them with no pharmaceutical assistance.  I am a bad ass.  But I did startle a bit when they started the procedure.  Sue me.  YOU WERE STABBING ME IN THE NECK.

There’s also this post on not being able to nurse her new baby because of her cancer treatment.  (Which, by the way, I think is a good post to read in tandem with my friend Krista’s How ‘Bout Them Apples? post the other day.)

I know I only have like five readers, but I sure hope each and every one of you will pop over to Nella’s blog. You’ll be richer for it. (If maybe a little sniffly. Yes, the blog is super funny at times. But it’s still heartbreaking. It’s still cancer.)

— 4 —

One more link. You know how, a little over a week ago, I found myself running ridiculous laps across the backyard because my 3-year-old destroyed my chance at having some quiet time to write? About abortion? I set the post aside for a while. But I revisited it last night and I think I can get it up a little later this week. ‘Till then, I thought this quote from Simcha Fisher was hilarious.

News flash.  The Church is against abortion.  Everyone knows this.  Everyone, everyone, everyone.  Find me some stoner kid living under the boardwalk and ask him what the Church teaches about abortion.  He’ll know.  Find me some juiced up Wall Street executive taking a four minute lunch before he dives back into the money pit, and ask him what the Church teaches about abortion.  He’ll know.  Find me some half demented grandpa shuffling down the hall in a nursing home and ask him what the Church teaches about abortion.  He’ll know.  And so will the nurse on call, and the secretary in the office, and the maintenance guy working on the drains, and the high school sophomore gloomily fulfilling his community service hours.  Ask the Planned Parenthood escort.  Ask the talking head who reads the news, or the nastiest combox troll.  The one thing that everybody knows is that the Church is against abortion.

What the world doesn’t know is why the Church is against abortion.  What the world doesn’t know is what the Church can offer instead of abortion.  The world doesn’t know why life is worth living. This is the message that every pope in recent memory has been preaching — that life is good!

“Some stoner kid living under the boardwalk”? I love her. I love her. I love her.

— 5 —

We got to visit with my brand new baby niece two times last week. On Thursday the boys and I drove up to my brother and sister-in-law’s house to visit for a few hours. On Sunday we gathered at my grandparents’ house for swimming and a little game of pass-the-new-baby-around. Here are some pics. Isn’t she sweet?

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Meeting one of her great-grandmas…

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… and meeting another great-grandma!

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They were enjoying the cicada shells attached to their shirts. We named the bugs Crunchy and Crispy. Surprise, surprise, it wasn’t long before Crunchy got, er… crunched.

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At the ripe old ages of 4 and 3, they’re turning into the daring big kids.

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— 6 —

Here’s some extreme randomness for you: I have very wavy/curly/FRIZZY hair. Hair that’s full of body, but that has zero desire to cooperate with any of my ideas for it. So let me tell you, I have some hilarious bed head in the morning. So hilarious, that were I a little more confident in my appearance, I would post a collage of all the crazy things my hair does in the morning. This morning it was almost entirely made up of wiry, frizzy little curlicues close to my head. But I also had one big wing of wavy frizz heading up and away off the top of my head, at a diagonal. My husband must be pretty darned used to it at this point, because I honestly can’t see why he doesn’t startle or snort with laughter when he first sees me in the morning. That’s pretty much what I do when I look in the bathroom mirror.

— 7 —

Why don’t you start your week off right with a couple of toddler jokes? (My three-year-old’s FIRST! He entertained us with them a few days ago, laughing his little head off.)

Set-up: “How do trains have hands?”
Punchline: “Why dey have bats!”

Set-up: “How do trains don’t have wheels?”
Punchline: “A baby!”

Oh, and then he said this, which was also great:
“What’s dat again? Sowwy, I have wax in my ear.”

Cute little stinker…

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He decided to eat his cookie under the table. I have no idea why.

Have  a great week!

7 Quick Takes Friday (Vol. 10)

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Maybe I should call this “7QT: Uncomfortable Revelations Edition.” Or how about “7QT: Grumbling Introspection Edition”? Or maybe I shouldn’t classify it as a Quick Takes anyway, because it’s anything but quick. (And by the way, I’m still embracing the Friday in the title, because even though I’m posting on Saturday, 90% of the post was written Friday. So it totally counts.)

Whatever you want to call it (or not call it), this week’s 7QT is a departure from my usual peppy jumble of household goings-on and NPR recommendations. I’m simply not feeling them this week. That said, to perk up this otherwise serious post a bit, I’m throwing in some wholly unrelated, happy pictures from the week. So if you’re not in the mood for discomfort and grumbling, just take a quick glance at the cute kids and move on to greener blog pastures.

— 1 —

First, the set-up: Wednesday evening I came home from a long, tiring day out with the boys and I wanted to just sit still for a few minutes in front of my computer. I was hoping that a few of my favorite bloggers had posted something new so I’d have fresh material to read. But when I discovered that a bunch of them had, was I happy? Nope. Not a bit. All I could think was: “Look at all those bloggers posting new material. They’re busier than I am, they have more kids than I do, and they were able to get something posted mid-week. Why couldn’t I?” Mope, mope, whine.

Nevermind that I had just spent 7.5 hours at the county fair with two toddlers. That I had risen and left the house a good two hours earlier than usual. That I’d wrangled my boys into (mostly) quiet behavior for hours while we (er, I) watched my cousins show their pigs. That for the second time that week, I’d caught my younger son’s vomit in my hands because on-the-fly fair eating (that is, not bothering to cut everything up into teeny tiny bits) doesn’t agree with him. That by the time we came home, we were sweaty, sticky, thirsty, dusty, muddy, and (dare I say it?) smelling of manure. And that – despite or because of it all – we’d had a great day together.

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I was coming off all that busyness and stress and fun, and I allowed myself to be plunged into the doldrums because bloggers I like had actually, you know, blogged. Because people I admired were doing something I admired. Because it wasn’t me.

Enter: Julie’s latest round of introspection. (They come frequently.) Between my observation of the aforementioned situation and the content of a few of the blog posts that I (reluctantly) read that evening, I began to think in earnest about how this (still new to me) blogging thing is affecting my mood, outlook, etc. Grumbling and thinking about it all in the most haphazard of fashions, I had the following uncomfortable revelations:

— 2 —

My old, familiar insecurities live on in my blogging, just as they do in the rest of my life.

Surprising, isn’t it? I don’t know why I hadn’t expected this. I guess I thought of starting the blog as turning a new page – a bright, shiny, open-horizon kind of page. Just like I once thought that becoming a stay-at-home-mother would cause me to shed my old work-related hang-ups. But of course, we are who we are. We have backgrounds and inclinations and personalities that affect how we act and how we interpret what happens around us. They don’t go away when we take on something new.

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To touch on a few of my insecurities (because they should add meaning to the rest of this post), let me just admit the following:

I often feel inadequate, particularly when it comes to matters of the mind. I compare myself to those whom I admire and I tend to feel like no matter how hard I try, I’ll never fit in with the truly intelligent and articulate. Or the holy.

I am unhappy with my appearance, especially insofar as it relates to my weight. This unhappiness is not a reaction to my age or to having borne children, nor is it simply some perception thing. I have been actually, technically, officially overweight for much of the past 20 years.

If it seems to me that someone easily masters those things which I find particularly challenging (see above), I’m likely to be jealous of them. I work on this one, I really do. But it lurks.

These are really unique insecurities, aren’t they? I mean, nobody else has feelings of inadequacy or jealousy or unhappiness with their appearance, right?

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— 3 —

People don’t simply have different tastes, they react with astounding difference to the same innocently-conceived material, based on their own struggles and hang-ups.

Let me point you to the following three blog posts:

Pretty, Gritty, Real: How to Read Blogs, by Simcha Fisher

Glimpses of Momentary Victory, by Hallie Lord

5 Favs (Fav # 5), by Jenny Uebbing

I feel like this is like a Russian doll version of blog suggestions: Hallie’s post is a focus of Simcha’s post, which is a focus of Jenny’s post. (And if you’re going to read only one, go with Simcha’s, which is the most thorough.) The moral that I took away from reading all three is something like this: People write blogs for different reasons; they read blogs for different reasons. Something that appeals to one person may agitate another. As a reader, you should know yourself and avoid the blogs that make you “want to punch somebody” as Simcha and Jenny put it. As a blogger – not that you should sweat the divergence in tastes too much – you should be thoughtful about how you present your life in your writing, because even innocent stories/remarks have the potential to cause pain for your readers.

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As far as taste is concerned, I like a pretty decent variety of Catholic mommy blogs. I like a few of the “gritty” ones, which share stories of messes and meltdowns and parental failures. They make me laugh and take myself a little less seriously. I like a few of the sentimental, pretty blogs, which cause me to daydream of loveliness and which inspire me to try harder to make the home and traditions I want my boys to grow up with. I love the blogs that jump into deeper subjects and challenge me to adjust my thinking and to live more fully/thoughtfully/prayerfully/generously, etc.

The only classification of mommy blog that I avoid entirely is the fashion blog. Because if I’m not feeling great about my weight, why would I want to look at pretty clothes and the prettier women wearing them? So on this count, I plan to keep on taking Simcha’s advice:

You can just stop reading, you know.  Or just read something else.  It’s in your control.

Take a good look at what happens to your state of mind if you check out this blog or that website or so-and-so’s Facebook or Twitter or Instagram persona.  Is something having a bad effect on you?  Every time you read a certain author, does it make you feel inadequate or self-righteous, discouraged or contemptuous?  Do you spend the rest of the afternoon criticizing yourself or other people?   Then just skip it — or look elsewhere…

Know thyself!  Take control!  It’s a big world, and one of the few parts you can actually do something about is deciding where to spend your time.

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— 4 —

Though I flatter myself as someone who is easily able to see different sides of a political issue, I’m often unable or unwilling to understand where people are coming from on personal issues that are particularly touchy for me.

With that one (fashion) exception, I don’t exclude whole classes of blogs because of my personal hang-ups. But I consistently come across material – single posts, single phrases, even – from my favorite bloggers that really push my buttons. Here are the primary examples:

Skinny bloggers who complain that they’re not skinny enough.

  • During their pregnancies, they say things like “Look at this picture of my HUGE baby bump! Strangers keep asking if I’m going to pop!” when they look all perky and thin with a lovely, smallish round belly – way smaller at 9 months than mine ever was at 5 months.
  • Post-pregnancy, it’s “I still can’t fit into my pre-baby jeans and s/he is FOUR months old!” Sorry, lady – no sympathy. Your stomach is flatter after three babies than mine was in high school.
  • And of course they always seem to be going on about their diets/exercise regimens and how they’re going to hell-in-a-handbasket because they indulged in one full-sugar soda. Excuse me while I throw a pillow or something.

The following also get to me, albeit in more of an eye-rolling, huffing kind of way:

  • Extreme purgers. I understand needing to declutter because your home is actually cluttered. I do not understand tossing 90% of your possessions because you get some kind of high out of it.
  • Romantic home/natural birthers. For one, I’m just not interested in birth stories. For another, I simply don’t understand some women’s need to have a spiritual/meaningful/transcendent birth “experience”. The only things that matter to me about giving birth are ending up with a healthy baby and mommy at the end. Pump me with drugs; brighten the lights; bring a half-dozen medical students through my room; I don’t care. Just give me a healthy baby and a healthy me.

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I realize that much of that was rather uncharitable. But it was the “before.” Here’s the “after” – the charity that this week’s revelations inspired:

Those skinny ladies? Reading between the lines, I sense that some of them have really struggled with their self-image. Maybe they’ve suffered through actual eating disorders. Maybe they’ve dealt with less severe, but still unsettling issues with food, exercise, and weight. You don’t have to reach a certain number on the scales to feel insecure about how you look.

And me? Even though I’ve been technically, medically overweight for most of the past 20 years and even though my weight always has and still does bother me, I am crazy blessed that I never had any inclination to confuse my appearance with my worth. For that reason, I escaped so many of the issues other women struggled through. I am so. incredibly. grateful.

And pregnancy? Pregnancy makes every woman bigger. No wonder that every woman feels bigger. Whether you wear a size 0 or a size 20, pregnancy changes and grows your body into a form that’s likely to feel uncomfortable and strange. I need to just go ahead and give the pregnant skinnies a break.

The purging thing? Even though part of me (I always say I have a bit of the Great Depression in me) cringes at the idea of throwing away objects that are still useful, that’s me. That’s my preference. Who am I to peg it on someone else? Maybe for some people it’s not so much that purging gives them a high, but rather that being surrounded by things makes them feel low.

The birthing thing? The home birthing trend will always bother me, because I think that every mother has a duty to do what she can to ensure a safe outcome for herself and her child. And removing oneself from the medical care available in a hospital just doesn’t make any sense to me. (Think of how many women in impoverished parts of the world would love to have the luxury of giving birth in a hospital!) And whether we like to think of it or not, women and babies still die in childbirth. We are not immune simply because we live in a wealthy country.

But the rest of it? The high value on having a certain birth “experience”? Why should I care if a woman wants to birth naturally, with low lights and scented oils? Maybe this is how she’s dealing with her fear. Because we might not want to talk about it, but we women are afraid when we head into childbirth: Of the pain. Of the lack of control we have over our own bodies. Of how our lives are about to change. Of something going wrong.

I need to remember these things when I come across blog material that bugs me. I need to be better about giving people the benefit of the doubt. And I need to be better about clicking away from something that bugs me, without taking any annoyed or self-righteous baggage with me when I go.

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They’re in a boat, surrounded by big, blue waves. Can’t you tell?

— 5 —

We often don’t see the hard work behind someone else’s attractive life.

It’s not just the sadness and hardship we miss when we look longingly at something that seems to come easily to another – we miss the hard work, too. In my single days, I saw the love and companionship in my friends’ marriages; I didn’t see the compromise and the tolerance and the putting someone else first. Before I had my own children, I saw the dimples and the curls and the sweet little dresses. I didn’t see the many hours my friends spent on their feet, the crumbs they swept off the floor, the vomit they caught with their bare hands.

Lately, a few kind souls have complimented me on my boys’ good behavior in public. I should be gracious enough to simply smile and say thank-you. But on the harder days, I’ve grumbled out an, “It’s hard work!” Because for all they know, I’ve been blessed with two amazingly compliant little cutie pies. But I’ve actually been blessed with two very real little boys – two very dramatic, energetic, independent little boys. They behave well in public because their father and I have worked our butts off in an untold number of small, tedious ways, teaching them to listen, to respond, to sit still when we need them to.

Recently I had a little “aha” moment when I realized that all those skinny ladies – the ones who are more attractive and fashionable than I think I’m capable of ever being – the ones who complain about their diets and workouts – those ladies work hard to be that way. Exercise is hard work. Eating right is hard work. Doing both while mothering a bunch of little kids is really hard work. I may look at their figures and clothes and see ease, but they most certainly do not.

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— 6 —

My own blog – this little thing that hardly anybody reads – can cause pain even when I’m careful.

Before reading Simcha’s post, this hadn’t really occurred to me. I knew I had to be careful about how I dealt with touchy political subjects. I had a sense that I should present my life as fairly and realistically as possible – beauty and warts. And I knew that I had a fair chance of annoying somebody with any given post. But I didn’t think about how my thoughts, my ideas, my ways of parenting, my home, my marriage, and heck, an untold number of things I can’t even think of right now could actually cause pain to someone who’s been nice enough to stop by to see what I have to say. It’s a weighty thing and there’s not exactly a solution to it. I suppose it’s just something I need to remember.

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— 7 —

As much as I aim to write things that other people will want to read, at the end of the day, I have to write this blog for me.

Yes, there is this and this. Yes, I’d love to attract readers and get some interesting back-and-forth going in the comment sections. Yes, I love hearing that something I’ve written has amused or touched someone. Yes, I’d like to avoid hurting or even annoying people with my writing. But These Walls is really for me. It gives me an avenue to work through my thoughts and ideas and it allows me to feel like I’ve said my piece on subjects that matter to me.

I also write this blog for my boys. Hopefully I’ll live a long life and I’ll always have strong relationships with them both. But you never know. One of my worst fears is that something should happen to prevent me from raising my sons. And almost as bad is the idea that something should happen to estrange us in their adulthood. Unfounded as those fears are, I am comforted by the idea that should they (heaven forbid) ever materialize, the words I write here give me another shot at reaching out to my boys. I like to think they would give my boys a sense of my love for them, of the way I see the world, and the values I hope to impart to them.

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Besides, These Walls has got to be for me (and my boys). There’s no possible way I can please or even interest everyone else. And there’s no way I can wholly avoid annoying/offending/hurting every single person who stops by this blog. All I can ever do is write posts that I like and that I can confidently stand behind. That’s it.

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Now, go on over to Jen’s and check out all the other Quick (much quicker than mine, I’m sure) Takes!

7 Quick Takes Friday (Vol. 9)

7 quick takes sm1 Your 7 Quick Takes Toolkit!

— 1 —

As my Facebook friends might have noticed, (“Thank goodness she’s no longer posting links to her stupid blog every day!”) I crashed hard on the blogging front after last week’s Epic Blogging Challenge. I eked out a little wrap-up by way of my Monday Morning Miscellany, and then I took a break. I’d been hoping to fit in at least one post before 7 Quick Takes Friday, but no go. “No-go” in a dramatic Julie meltdown kind of way:

Wednesday I found myself with some unexpected quiet time due to two little boys being such tired messes that I put them both down for naps. (The 3-year-old almost never naps anymore; I only succeeded in getting him to sleep this time because I bribed him with ice cream.) So I used part of my break to start writing a post I’ve been planning in my head for some time, on… (do you hear the ominous thunder?) …abortion. It’s a topic that requires some careful, quiet consideration, is it not?

But do little boys care about writing that requires quiet, concentration, and more quiet? Absolutely not.  So on Thursday, when I’d planned to spend a couple of hours finishing and posting the piece, my 3-year-old very slyly ruined my plans in that most maddening of ways: bit by bit. The 22-month-old went down without a hitch and slept for FOUR hours! (What a tease!) But his older brother got to stay up because he was behaving decently and promised to play quietly (HA!) so I could write in peace.

I won’t bore you with the details; I’ll just say that all the noise and the sporadic interruptions and the questions and the following me from room-to-room and the unwillingness to just be quiet, already drove me up the wall. In that slow, simmering way that leads you (or maybe just me) to finally boil over all at once. After getting done in three hours what I should have gotten done in 30 minutes, I lost it: I banished the kid to the parlor (Yep, we have a “parlor;” I’ll explain another time), realized I was too angry to keep writing, and went outside to take some of my own mommy advice and run laps across the backyard. Or rather, I dashed one way across the yard and then dragged my sorry, out-of-shape self slowly back the other way. Several times. It must have been quite a sight to see.

Then I came inside, sat the kid in front of the TV, and poured myself a glass of wine.

— 2 —

Oh, and do you know what he proceeded to do just minutes later? Yep, fall asleep at the table.

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It was like there was this big neon sign flashing at me: YOU SHOULD HAVE PUT HIM DOWN FOR A NAP!

— 3 —

Have I mentioned about a million times that my boys are wrestlers? Like, every day, everywhere, with everyone wrestlers. Here are some recent examples:

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So now do you see why I feel like I deserve some quiet time every once in a while?!?!

— 4 —

Usually when we go grocery shopping, the three-year-old gets to hand over my Safeway card. It makes him happy and the checkers think it’s cute. But the other day I made a quick trip to the grocery store sans children. (Cue heavenly chorus.) After I loaded up the belt, I handed the very polite, clean-cut, shy-looking teenage boy my card. And then I proceeded to load it back into my wallet, search my purse for my keys, and… walk away. “Umm, Ma’am? You need to pay.”

I was pretty embarrassed. I mean, how ridiculous is it that my excuse was that I did not have my two toddlers with me at the time? That handing the checker my Safeway card by myself tricked my feeble little brain into thinking I’d actually paid the guy?

— 5 —

I thought this article (“How to keep Millennials in the church? Let’s keep church un-cool.”) from Wednesday’s Washington Post was interesting, and the last paragraph especially so:

As a Millennial, if I’m truly honest with myself, what I really need from the church is not another yes-man entity enabling my hubris and giving me what I want. Rather, what I need is something bigger than me, older than me, bound by a truth that transcends me and a story that will outlast me; basically, something that doesn’t change to fit me and my whims, but changes me to be the Christ-like person I was created to be.

The author seems to have been writing with evangelical Protestants in mind, but his sentiment certainly fits with most of the (practicing) Catholic young adults I know. (And yes, with my own viewpoint.) I keep hearing anecdotally that the faiths that are attracting and retaining young people are the ones with more orthodox teachings and traditional liturgical styles. I would be interested in reading any studies on the topic that might be out there. (Know of any? Send them my way!)

— 6 —

As per usual, I have an NPR program to point you to, though this week’s recommendation comes with the caveat that I haven’t actually heard it yet: The radio signal was going all crazy Wednesday night when I was trying to listen to listen to the program. I heard part of the introduction (which sounded super interesting), but the static ended up being too much to ignore. Maybe later I’ll pull it up on the computer while I wash all those dishes I’ve got sitting around.

The program, “What Would Lawrence Of Arabia Say Today?” was on NPR’s On Point:

Much of the Arab world looks like a terrible mess these days. And much of the mess goes back a century. To the end of the Ottoman Empire. The end of World War I.  Britain and France drawing imperial lines across a desert map.

And in the midst of it all, young T.E. Lawrence — Lawrence of Arabia. He did not like what he saw coming in the victor’s boundaries laid across tribes and sects.

It’s all come back to haunt.

This hour, On Point: A new biography puts the lens of Lawrence of Arabia on the Arab world today.

I track the news from the Middle East with so much sadness these days. Syria, Egypt: what impossible, tragic situations. I am generally a very optimistic person, but there… I just don’t see a lot of hope for real and lasting improvements in those countries. It seems like one possible “solution” is worse than the next.  And there’s always Afghanistan… and now Iraq is making its way back into the news… I look forward to listening to this program for some more perspective on the region; maybe I’ll check out the book too.

— 7 —

Here’s a random, funny little note to leave you on – one of my favorite little tactics/tricks for getting the boys to willingly eat their breakfast and cut down on my breakfast prep work: Hand them a waffle and tell them it’s a cookie. (Or rather, because I’m supremely honest and I can’t bear to tell even that small of a white lie, I say the following with much excitement: “Do you want to eat your waffle whole, like it’s a cookie?”) They fall for it hook, line, and sinker.

P1150821Have a great weekend! Go visit Jen and the rest of the Quick Takes crew!

Monday Morning Miscellany (Vol. 3)

— 1 —

Well, I did it! I completed Jen’s 7 Posts in 7 Days: An Epic Blogging Challenge. As tired as I was upon our return from Minnesota, I think I did pretty well for the first five days. (I even wrote two posts on Tuesday.)

But then Saturday hit. I was just two posts shy of completing the Challenge and I was burnt out. I’m a slow writer, a perfectionist, and pretty much unable to think when I’m surrounded by noise and activity. (Which is just about every waking hour with two toddler boys in the house). So my boys watched a lot of television last week and I did not get much sleep. By the time the weekend rolled around, I really had to push myself through. I waited until the boys were in bed (or nearly so) to write, because I felt like they had reached their limit of mommy-in-front-of-the-computer time. (So I got even less sleep.) Last week’s pattern is most definitely not sustainable.

Behind the Laptop

But on the bright side, the Challenge showed me that I’m capable of more writing than I’ve gotten in the habit of undertaking lately. It was easily the most I’ve written in one week since I left my job three years ago. And honestly, it felt great. So thanks, Jen, for encouraging everybody to undertake the Challenge. Maybe I’ll do it again someday. But, um… not anytime soon. Three to four posts a week? I think I can swing that.

— 2 —

I thought I’d list out the posts I wrote during the Challenge so you can see if there’s anything you missed. (Though maybe that’s not really why I’m listing them. It could be just because I like lists. And because I always feel more accomplished when I’ve written out what I’ve done.)

Monday – Monday Morning Miscellany, Vol. 2 — (Mostly a recap of our trip to Minnesota, but oddly enough, also a description of how we sold our house last year.)

Tuesday – On Authority — (An essay on, yes, authority. Its alternate titles were, “On Authority, Influence, Rebellion, And Obedience” or, “Why I Reject Fads But Accept Rules” or, “Okay, Fine – I Guess I Really Am A Dork.”)

Tuesday – A Tale of Two Soldiers — (A story of two WWII veterans from opposing sides: my stepfather-in-law and a perfect stranger whom I met years ago on a train platform in Germany.)

Wednesday – Five Favorites, Vol 3: Minnesota Edition — (Minnesota trip recap, part two.)

Thursday – A “Crazy” Good Night — (Musings on an evening of ideas and conversation with Auntie Leila of Like Mother, Like Daughter.)

Friday – 7 Quick Takes Friday, Vol. 8 — (An odd jumble of blog love, new babies, post-WWII horror, nursing homes, parades… and vomit. Sorry for the last one.)

Saturday – Friends Who Blog — (In which I talk about some of my friends and how we help each other… and how a bunch of them blog, too.)

Sunday – My World Youth Day — (Remembering my experience at the 2005 WYD in Cologne, Germany.)

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— 3 —

If I had to pick just one of those posts for you to read, I’d go with A Tale of Two Soldiers.

— 4 —

I made one of our favorite dinners last night: Perfect Roast Chicken (with carrots, onion, thyme, and fennel). It is amazing. Amazing! I was clued in to the recipe by a brief mention Rachel Balducci made of it on her blog. I bless whatever impulse caused her to post it, because it became one of our favorites from the very first bites we tasted.

Sorry -- no pretty platter last night. It was too late and we were too tired!

Sorry — no pretty platter last night. It was too late and we were too tired!

— 5 —

Here’s another of our current favorites: Slow Cooker Thai Pork With Peanut Sauce. (I was clued into this one by my friend Kristina.) The only drawback is that it’s so easy to make that I do so a little too frequently and my husband is starting to tire of it. I don’t want to, but I may need to give it a break for a while.

— 6 —

My 3-year-old, who has just finished potty training and is about to start preschool in September, has said a number of funny things this week:

While using the restroom after vociferously insisting that he didn’t need to: “Oh, I did need to go pee-pee! I sowwy, Daddy!” (This one has happened many times in the past couple of weeks.)

Sitting on the toilet for an extended period of time: “Watch out, Mommy! Es goin’ be dwangewous.”

In a public restroom, balling up a piece of toilet paper and preparing to throw it into the toilet that I was using at the moment: “Es for your pwactice, Mommy!” Me: “Sweetie, Mommy doesn’t need target practice.”

Every morning for the past 3-4 days: “I’m ready to go to school now!”

After (barely) bumping his head: “I huwt my head an I need to go in da ambwance!”

Walking along the many, many brick walls in our yard and along our driveway: “Don worry, Mommy. I’m in compwete contwol.”

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Sorry it’s fuzzy — it’s the best I’ve got!

Have a great week, everyone!

My World Youth Day

Today (er, yesterday – I’m getting this posted past midnight) the closing mass for World Youth Day 2013 was held on Copacabana Beach in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Have you seen the pictures? Have you seen that three million people attended the mass? Three million people in one place. That’s like the whole state of Iowa, squeezed into a 2.5 mile-long stretch of sand. It’s mind-boggling. It’s just about impossible to visualize.

Eight years ago, I was struggling to visualize what one million people looked like, and I was standing in the middle of it. Back then I was attending the closing mass of World Youth Day 2005 outside Cologne, Germany. I was out in the middle of a massive field, to which we had hiked for what seemed like hours. Maybe it was hours, I don’t know. The whole thing’s a little fuzzy to me. I just remember walking through a small town (Maybe we were bussed there? Maybe we were delivered via train?) where people lined the streets to watch us pass. Then we were trudging along a rugged path; finally we were stepping onto a ginormous field filled with hundreds of thousands of people.

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We set up “camp” (the term is used very loosely – I think I might have slept under an umbrella) and spent the night on the ground, so as to be in place for mass the next morning. When we went to sleep, the place seemed crowded. By the time we awoke, it was packed. People had filtered in through the morning hours, filling in just about any space they could find. It wasn’t just WYD participants, either – lots of locals had also come. I kept hearing that there were a million people there, but all I knew was that there were people everywhere, as far as I could see.

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To get a sense of that amazing number, I looked up at the altar (which I could see decently well, though I was only able to see newly-elected Pope Benedict XVI through a pair of binoculars) and some jumbo screen landmarks and got a sense of where I was in relation to them. Then I looked onto the screens themselves, where they kept showing aerial footage of the crowd. We were almost directly in front of the altar, about half-way back. Soon enough it dawned on me that my “everywhere,” my “as far as I could see,” was maybe 1/5th of the entire crowd. You simply can’t see one million people when you’re in the middle of them.

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Obviously, the experience made an impression on me: this sea of young people, taking it in turns to laugh and sing and pray. Even at home, even on a regular Sunday, sometimes at mass I’m struck with the wonder of it all: that modern people, pushed and pulled by the demands of their everyday lives, would come to spend a quiet hour in the company of One whom they cannot not see. That they would sit and listen to words written thousands of years ago about people in an entirely different part of the world, words that somehow also apply to them. Here. Sitting here in their sundresses and flip-flops and polo shirts, pockets filled with muted iPhones and jangling car keys. That they would walk quietly up the aisle to eat bread and sip wine that is somehow also the very body and blood of the One for whom they came. That boggles my mind too.

So if a “regular” Sunday mass (sometimes) strikes me as so amazing, imagine how amazed I was at seeing one million people at mass. Most of them cold, wet, tired, hungry and young? Like I said, it made quite an impression.

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You know what also made an impression on me? The way WYD was received by the local community in and around Cologne. I didn’t have the typical WYD experience while I was there because I wasn’t a full “participant,” technically. I was a volunteer in the U.S. bishops’ temporary office, which served as a home base and troubleshooting center for the leaders of the U.S. groups attending WYD. Sometimes those leaders stopped by with their participants; sometimes a few of the bishops dropped in. But I really enjoyed when the locals visited. I speak German (These days I just kinda sorta speak German; back then I actually spoke it), so I was usually the one who got to chat with the local visitors. And what I heard warmed my heart.

One older couple stopped by “just to see what all the young people were up to.” Most were curious and maybe a little bemused at this invasion of Catholic youth. You see, Cologne is used to crowds. They host a massive Karnival celebration every year (think: Mardi Gras), so the locals thought they had a pretty good idea of what to expect when hundreds of thousands of young people descended on their city. But to a person – whether visitors to our office, or taxi drivers, or the host couple who took me in – the locals I met were pleasantly surprised, impressed, and even touched by their experiences with WYD participants.

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Western Europeans, of course, have a reputation for being very secular. Their churches are said to be empty and they seem to be, at best, ambivalent about religion. (Now, I know that’s not the rule everywhere. I spent a summer in Bavaria, where the church seemed to be very much alive.) So it was beyond refreshing for me to encounter all these Germans who were having a positive, hopeful encounter with the Church. For a moment, at least, I think they saw another way.

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See that tiny little figure in white? Yep, that’s him! Pope Benedict XVI!

And you know what? Those kids did that. Those noisy, sloppy, joyous kids did it. The Holy Spirit used those kids to reach out to people who had perhaps become unaccustomed to opening their hearts and minds to God.

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Now, I don’t know how great of an impact a one-week-long event can have on the entirety of anybody’s life, whether participant or witness. But I think it can plant a seed. I think there are thousands upon thousands of people who remember those few days of 2005 fondly – perhaps with joy, perhaps with peace, perhaps just with interest. I feel blessed to count myself among them.

Friends Who Blog

The other day at her Crazy DC Meet-Up, Auntie Leila pounded home the idea that we should do at least three things for our girlfriends: (1) Watch their children when they need to go to the doctor’s, (2) bring dinner to them when they’ve had a baby or are otherwise in need, and (3) have a shower for them every time they have a baby. (Not just the first time.)

This, of course, got me to thinking of my own girlfriends, especially a few that I’d been planning to mention during this week of the Epic Blogging Challenge anyway.

There’s Krista, who just started a blog. It’s called And Another Thing, Hon and I think this post does a good job of describing what she wants to do with it. Krista is a great writer (she used to write full-time; now that she stays at home, she freelances). She’s funny, she’s insightful, and she has very entertaining children. (Two very pretty, very imaginative, very smart little girls.) I’m one of the chorus of friends who has been pelting her Facebook posts with “you should start a blog!” comments for years.

Krista threw me a bridal shower and I helped throw her a baby shower. We’ve thrown a few more together. She read at my wedding; I sang at hers. We brought each other dinners when our babies were born. I don’t see as much of Krista these days as I would like, so I’m glad that with And Another Thing, Hon, I’ll have another way to keep up with what’s running through her mind.

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Krista holding my first little newborn

There’s my friend Betsy, who blogs at The Adventures of an Amateur Housewife. She writes about her projects around the house and her sweet-as-can-be little boys, Joseph and John. (Seriously – it’s hard to find little guys as easygoing and likeable as Betsy’s.) I sang at Betsy’s wedding and threw her a baby shower. I also watched Joseph (whom my 3-year-old – much to the chagrin of his real little brother – dubbed, “my yiddle brudder”) when Betsy was in the hospital for John’s birth. We brought each other dinners when our babies were born. We visit (pretty) frequently and watch each other’s boys when one of us needs a hand. Betsy’s a great there-when-you-need-her kind of friend.

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Brennan and me with Betsy and her husband Will at their wedding

There’s my friend Mary, who I’m kind of calling out here, because she’s thisclose to starting a blog. She’s a terrific writer and she’s super smart and savvy, so I can’t wait to see what she’s come up with. Mary has two cutie-pie little girls and another on the way. She and I never hosted showers for each other, but we did have a joint shower thrown for us when we had our first children. (Her oldest is just about six weeks younger than mine.) We supported each other with dinners when our babies were born and we get together for playdates, though not as frequently as we should. Both Betsy and Mary were there the other night at Auntie Leila’s Crazy DC Meet-Up.

Joint Shower

Pink and blue cakes for our joint baby shower

Then there’s Stephanie, who has just recently revived her blog, Watcher of the Morn’. I don’t know Stephanie quite as well as these other three ladies, but I sure do like her. (And I will always appreciate the help she gave to Brennan and me on our wedding day!) Stephanie is now about a month away from entering the convent as a postulant with the Sisters, Servants of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. When you visit Stephanie’s blog, you can read how she discerned her vocation and learn about some of the more practical aspects of having a loved one in the convent. (Or this one, at least.) You can also read her thoughts on the religious life:

I’m choosing the religious life because part of answering the restlessness was making a commitment. A life commitment. Sure, I could do that by getting married and taking seriously the vow to love and cherish my spouse till death do us part. But for me, the idea of marriage and a family was a restricting one…

[E]very time I sit in a room full of young families and watch them in action and listen to their stories, I’m haunted by the thought, “But I want more.” A family of my own just isn’t enough for me! I know individual families that have done incredible things, and made huge impacts in the lives of those around them. But in my heart I knew I’d never be satisfied with that narrow sphere of influence.

I’ve spent the last four years working for a religious order, and have seen up-close the impact these men have in the lives of those they serve. Many of them have connections with people that go back 40 years. They are members of dozens of families, and they’ve impacted thousands of lives. Those in religious life will likely never know the extent of the impact they have until we all, God-willing, get to heaven. But that’s one of the things that attracted me to this life – the ability to impact the world, albeit in a quiet way. The ability to touch the world and leave behind an eternal fingerprint.

In a world with so much noise and opinions and information overload, I’m choosing religious life because I happen to believe strongly in something Pope Paul VI said in 1975. Addressing members of the Vatican’s Council for Laity, he said, “Modern man listens more willingly to witnesses than to teachers, and if he does listen to teachers, it is because they are witnesses.” Yes, it’s totally possible to be a witness as a lay person. But as a member of a religious community, especially one that wears distinctive clothing, I hope to be one of those witnesses the pope talked about. In a world where images are so powerful … the sight of a woman in a habit, standing out in a crowd, speaks louder than anything that might come out of her mouth…

This is an invitation to a radically different life, and it’s not for everyone. But it’s a life that spoke to my heart at its deepest level. That small whisper that said, “come and see.”

I am struck by how Stephanie, like many modern women, wants “more” than family life. She knows she “would never be satisfied with that narrow sphere of influence.” But unlike most of those who share her sentiment, Stephanie chooses not career and single life, but rather the convent.

Stephanie recently came to my house for lunch and we discussed this idea at length. Personally, I always felt very much called to the vocation of wife and mother. I was sure that it was what I was supposed to do. But I can see where Stephanie is coming from. I can see how the religious life – contrary to its popular portrayal – could be liberating. How freeing it could be, to point your mind and body and daily occupation all towards God! And to have your focus be so obvious to both you and the world. Now, I know that I serve God when I serve my husband and children, but I don’t usually think about it. (I should, but I don’t.) My husband and boys don’t think about it either; neither do the people we encounter on a daily basis. But (I would imagine), it’s pretty clear to a religious sister that what she’s doing, day-after-day, is serving God. And when they see her habit, the rest of the world knows it too. Society doesn’t expect her to be fully ‘of’ this world and that has got to be liberating.

Stephanie

Stephanie at my rehearsal dinner

Anyway, now you know a bit about four of my lovely friends who blog* (or who are, ahem, about to). Three of them, like me, find their place in their home, surrounded by the people they love. The fourth has found her place in the convent, focused on God and the work he has put before her. I hope you’ll visit all of their spaces and take a look around.

* I have more, but we’ll save them for another day…

7 Quick Takes Friday (Vol. 8)

7 quick takes sm1 Your 7 Quick Takes Toolkit!

— 1—

I’m more than a little excited that the estimable Auntie Leila shared a link to this piece I wrote yesterday about Wednesday evening’s “Crazy DC Meet-up.” Views to this very young blog more than quadrupled within a couple of hours after her share. (!!!) Ahhh, the power of Facebook and a well-loved blogger…

— 2 —

I missed last week’s 7 Quick Takes because we were away on vacation. The obsessive-compulsive part of me regrets that I missed a week. (I hadn’t done so since I started the blog at the end of May.) The more pragmatic part isn’t sweating it. Vacations with young families are hard work! And I have been dutifully complying with Jen’s “7 Posts in 7 Days: An Epic Blogging Challenge.” One need only glance at the interior of my home to tell. Partially-unpacked suitcases sprawled open on the floor? Check. Dirty laundry still tied up in shopping bags? Check. Dining room table cluttered with stacks of never-packed clothes and wrappings from packed snacks and toys? Check. Before we arrived home, I had been hoping to take a page out of Rachel’s book and have everything unpacked and put away as soon as we got home. But, ah, no. Too tired. And too much blogging to do.

— 3 —

As I type this, my sister-in-law is in labor with her fifth child. She and my brother already have four girls and they don’t know the gender of this baby. I only have one brother. My father has no brothers who carry on the family name. His father did, but his only brother had all daughters. We literally don’t know anyone else with our uncommon surname but my brother’s family, my parents, and my grandmother. So… no pressure, guys. None at all.

(Seriously though, we looove baby girls in our family and would be thrilled to add another little doll to the mix. And as I personally feel destined to have all boys, I’m happy to have as many nieces as I can get.)

UPDATE: It’s a… GIRL! A healthy baby girl! Yay! Congratulations, Eric and Michele!

— 4 —

I heard two really, really interesting stories on NPR the other day. The first was a Fresh Air interview with Keith Lowe, the author of Savage Continent. It was fascinating. And heartbreaking. The book describes Europe in the wake of World War II: the physical destruction, the breakdown of law and order, the loss of institutions and lives, etc. It was horrible. And yet there was so much in the interview that I could relate to, either in simple human sympathy, or because I’d encountered someone who’d lived in Europe at the time. There were all those stories told to me by Nina’s grandfather. There were those told to me by our sister-in-law’s grandmother, who fled Germany after the war. There were, of course, the World War II veterans I had met or continue to know.

If you’re a history buff, I highly recommend listening to the interview. If you’re not, I recommend it anyway. I always like to take in books, radio, TV, and movies that teach me something about what it is to be human. And that make me feel connected to people who have lived in different times and different parts of the world. Savage Continent most definitely fits the bill. You be sure to check out the interview; I’ll check out the book.

— 5 —

The second was a segment on All Things Considered that concerned an innovation in nursing homes called The Green House Project. Given that we just visited my husband’s stepfather in his nursing home last week, the topic was fresh on my mind. Ed happens to be, at this point, in a very nice, new, comfortable kind of a nursing home. But it still feels like an institution. And I’ve been in other nursing homes that feel like scary, depressing institutions. Are these the kind of places that I would like to live out the last days/months/years of my life? Absolutely not. Nobody would. Everybody would (I wager) rather be at home. Their own home would be best, but somebody else’s home would probably be acceptable too.

The Green House Project seems to come pretty close. From the brief piece I heard, Green Houses represent the best of both worlds: private bedrooms and baths for each resident, staff present 24/7 to care for them, no more than 12 residents at a time, a look and layout similar to a suburban home, an open kitchen, shared meals, and lots of flexibility. And believe it or not, they’re often more affordable than a standard nursing home. I find it all very interesting and encouraging. If you do too, I hope you’ll listen to the segment.

— 6 —

Our town had a little parade last night. (Random, hm?) I packed the boys into the stroller and walked down the road so we could take it in. We found a nice little spot next to our neighbors and spent a lovely hour chatting, viewing fire engine after fire engine, startling every time an engine blared its horn, clapping to the beat of the bands, enjoying the cool air and the beginnings of a pink sunset, and getting pelted with candy. It was wonderful – such a lovely break from our regular evening routine. The boys were so happy. (I was too.)

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— 7 —

Let me tell you, it was a very good thing that we had such a nice beginning to our evening, because the end? It didn’t go so well.

Wait – do you get queasy easily? If so, stop reading now. Thanks for stopping by! Nice having you here!

If you don’t, however, and you’re one of those people who enjoys reading about vomity children as long as they belong to someone else, then read on. I’m your gal. My ultra-sensitive-gagging-boys have given me more vomit stories to share with you than you could ever hope to read. If you’re a Conversion Diary reader, you may remember Jen’s Poop Fates. Well, maybe I called down the Vomit Fates with my “My babies hardly ever spit up!” comments while they were still in their infancies. Because ever since – ever since they were gagging on solid foods and mucous, that is – they have both produced more than their fair shares of vomit.

Right now, it’s the 21-month-old. When I got back from the “Crazy DC Meet-up” Wednesday night, my husband greeted me with a “Well, both of the boys are sick.” What had been just ‘a 3-year-old with slightly congested-sounding breathing’ quickly turned into ‘both boys definitely have very drippy, gunky colds.’ That night the little guy coughed, gagged, and threw up. Not such a big deal – I got him to the sink in time.

Last night, though? Just as I was sitting down to write my 7 Quick Takes, the 3-year-old came down to tell me that his brother had “frone up.” I went up to my bedroom to find my husband (who had been reading the boys their bedtime story) and the little guy and my pillow and my bed (down to the mattress – thank goodness we have a guest room!) all covered in vomit.

“Oh, well,” I tried to tell myself. I’d needed to change the sheets anyway: the 3-year-old had peed on them that morning.

One big clean-up later, the boys were settled in their beds. Until we heard some more coughs. And gags. This time the little guy had vomited all over himself and his bedding. Another big clean-up (and another addition to the washing machine) later, he was finally settled down and sleeping.

Good thing he’s so cute:

J Hugs 1

J Hugs 2

J Hugs 3

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Don’t forget to go visit Jen and all the rest of the Quick Takers!

A “Crazy” Good Night

Last night I attended Auntie Leila’s “Crazy DC Meet-Up.” To those who are already familiar with her – How exciting is that?! To those who aren’t, “Auntie” Leila Lawler blogs, with her daughters, at Like Mother, Like Daughter. She provides practical and insightful advice on making a home, along with the family, parenting, marriage, and faith matters that go along with it.

Anyway, the event was great. So great, in fact, that I hardly know where to start in writing about it – or even mentally processing it. Auntie Leila is so perceptive and thoughtful and good at putting her finger right on the truth of a matter. She has a real gift. She’s also very real and relatable, which – though I know I should have – I hadn’t really expected.

Auntie Leila has done and will do a much better job than I could of providing an overview of the content of last night’s gathering. But here are the points that I took away from it, that related most to me, in my own particular situation (that is, a mother to two toddler boys and someone who recently moved into the home and town were we plan to live for years to come):

On community and friendship:

  • I am responsible for cultivating the community of friends in which I want to raise my family.
  • To do so, I need to approach people, get involved in my parish and neighborhood, invite individuals and families to my home, and give, give, give. (Namely by giving a hand – a meal, a few hours of child care – to a friend who needs it.)
  • I need to remember that friendships are not static, that not all friends need to be your best friend, that I shouldn’t limit myself to making friends of my same age or family situation, that I can always use another friend, and that others can too.
  • Not only should I always be reading something, and should some of what I read be challenging and instructive, but I should also arrange to be reading the same something as my friends every once in a while, so we have something to discuss when we’re together.

On parenting:

  • Children (especially boys) need a lot – a lot – of time to run around uninhibited. Outside is best. So is getting incredibly dirty and sweaty and tired.
  • Children also need to be taught to sit still (for a little while) and to obey their parents. So many things – making it quietly through mass, for instance – depend on the laying of that groundwork.
  • They need to be taught to think of others – their parents, their siblings, their friends, and those they encounter only in passing. They need to be taught to be helpful.
  • Boys need to be taught – especially by their fathers – how to channel their aggression. They need to be taught to stick up for themselves and to protect others – especially those who are weaker than they are.

Now, I’m not going to pretend that all of this was new to me. As I told my husband last night, much of what Auntie Leila talked about, I felt like I already knew, if only intuitively. And yes, I learned lots of it from my own family. (Thanks, Mom!) But Auntie Leila articulated it so well – she presented it so clearly and sensibly, that hearing it from her not only reminded me of the lessons I learned from my own family, it refreshed and energized me.

It also prompted me to revisit some questions I’ve been thinking about for some time, and which at some point I’ll likely write about more thoroughly:

  • What qualities do I prize in people?
  • What kind of men do I want my boys to grow into?
  • What experiences do I want for my boys?
  • When am I most happy and at peace?
  • When am I most agitated or discouraged?
  • What parts of my personality get in the way of me living the life I want to?
  • What are the practical, everyday things I can do to help me be a better wife, parent, friend, and citizen?

This morning I spent some quiet time with my boys, pondering it all. We built a castle out of blocks. We talked. I held my 21-month-old on my lap longer than I normally do. I witnessed my three-year-old’s delight as he stuffed blocks into his pockets. I gave and got lots of cuddles and kisses. We were still tired from a poor night’s sleep and my house is still a gigantic mess, but a cool breeze was blowing through the windows and my mind was filled with last night’s good conversation. I felt refreshed and hopeful. Thank you, Auntie Leila.

Building a Castle

P.S. I’m posting every day this week for Jen’s challenge. Check out others who are doing the same.

P.P.S. Also be sure to read Jen’s recent post on “building a village” – it fit so well with Auntie Leila’s message.

Five Favorites (Vol. 3): Minnesota Edition

five-favorites-moxie-wife-1

As I mentioned in this little post, we just returned from a vacation to Minnesota, where we were visiting my husband’s family. To round out my review, I thought I’d jump on the Five Favorites bandwagon to share some more of the trip’s highlights.

But first, it goes without saying that our most favorite thing of all from the trip was just hanging out with Brennan’s family. We usually feel lucky if we fit in one visit with each of Brennan’s relatives on our trips to Minnesota. But this time we saw most of them en masse four different times, plus individual visits with most of the crew. It was great. We also spent some time with Brennan’s stepfather at his nursing home. I wrote a sentimental little post about it yesterday. I hope you’ll check it out.

Here are some of my other favorites, in no particular order:

— 1 —

Kissy faces.

Kissy Face

We take one of these pictures (with two of Brennan’s sisters) every time we visit. Our 21-month-old won’t tolerate it, but our 3-year-old is just fine. Our plan is to have a whole series of the shots – from his first Minnesota visit at just six months old, to however old he is when he finally refuses to let his aunts kiss him.

— 2 —

Minnehaha Falls.

Minnehaha Falls

I know I mentioned it in my previous post, but geez, that place is wonderful. Not only is the waterfall itself beautiful, and not only can you get pretty darned close to it, but the rest of the park is great too. There are lots of walking and biking trails, there’s an area where you can swim downstream from the falls, and you can even rent one of these lovely contraptions for a tour around the park:

Riding at Minnehaha

Disclosure: I do not know how to ride a bike. (Yes, you read that correctly.) So I was very little use to my husband on this thing. Poor guy. At one point he complained that I didn’t seem to know when to peddle and when not to. I replied, “How many times do I have to tell you that I don’t know how to ride a bike?!”

— 3 —

These lovely earrings.

Lisa's earrings

Our sister-in-law, Lisa, is a very talented jewelry artist. She makes glass beads to use in her designs and she also makes fine metal jewelry. (Check out her website here.) When Lisa and her husband were visiting us a few months ago, she made molds of some of the ornate hardware in our 150-year-old house. When we saw them in Minnesota, Lisa presented me with a lovely set of silver earrings and a necklace pendant, which she had made from one of the molds. Isn’t that wonderfully thoughtful and generous of her? I was so excited, I wore them for most of the rest of our vacation.

— 4 —

Watching the boys “build a tower” by dismantling their (very tolerant) Uncle Jack’s garden.

Boys Building

First of all, Jack’s garden is one of the most beautiful I have ever seen. I have nearly zero experience when it comes to growing fruits and vegetables, but oh, how I want to learn. I was just about salivating, looking at his gorgeous set-up.

And yes – he was so tolerant. The boys were picking up boards (and, er, bricks) that Jack uses to weigh down netting over his strawberry plants. It was great to see how creatively they played and how well they worked together.

— 5 —

Watching (and dodging) the boys as they wrestled with Uncle Josh.

Wrestling with Josh

Poor Josh. Those boys had a heck of a squealing, screaming, thrashing, rolling good time, but Josh came out a little worse for the wear. Our littlest guy scratched his face pretty deeply. I think (hope?) Josh was planning to come up with a better story for his coworkers than “My cousin’s 21-month-old attacked my face.”

— Bonus —

(I’ve got to add a little bonus, not-in-Minnesota-but-still-very-much-a-favorite-part-of-our-trip Favorite, here:)

A glass of wine on the return flight.

Despite lots of people’s suggestions that I should, I usually don’t imbibe on a plane, especially when I’ve got the little guys to keep track of. But this time we barely made it onto the flight.

We were later leaving for the airport than we planned, we hit traffic, security was slow, blah, blah, blah… The end result was that we had to scurry our way all through the airport, trying to make it to the gate on time. It wasn’t quite as dramatic as Home Alone, but our three-year-old did fall flat on his face twice because his little feet just couldn’t keep up with our pace. We hurried up to the gate, huffing and puffing, and were relieved to learn we could still board the plane. We were the last folks to do so. And we had two car seats to install, two toddlers to wrangle, and a stroller to break down and store in a stupid, stupid travel bag. (My littlest guy twice escaped from me while I was trying to break down the stroller. He ran right onto the plane by himself. I had to retrieve him from First Class. Both times.) Our fellow passengers loved us, I’m sure.

Anyway, we settled in for the flight, sweaty and out-of-breath, and I divvied up the sandwiches I had snatched for us on the way onto the plane. (“PleasedoIhavetime- toseeiftheyhavesandwichesinthatcooler!?!” is, I think, what I said to the gate attendant.) The boys were uneasy and we didn’t have much milk to offer them, but thankfully they both drifted off to sleep.

So I ordered my wine. I sat still and I sipped it. I didn’t think. I didn’t occupy my mind or my hands. I just sat and let that dry airplane air and that just-okay-tasting pinot grigio cool and calm me down. I think I may have enjoyed it more than any other glass of wine I’ve had in recent memory. It was lovely.

For about an hour, when the screaming resumed.

Now… go visit Grace (who’s stepping in for Hallie this week) and the others for some more favorites!