A Hesitant Bride

By the time many women descend the aisle, they have spent their child – and early adult – hoods thinking about The Wedding. This may be a pop-culture generated idea, but it’s the idea I’ve always stuck to. I was never that girl. I didn’t pick out dresses, I didn’t think about flowers and color schemes and venues. I never thought about what my husband would look like.  The hours that some spend on a day, I spent on an even more dangerous idea: the marriage, the life.

My precious?

I racked up a few proposals in my late teens and early twenties, and escaped them in the same haphazard way I elicited them. It was easy to place the puzzle piece of a person up next to my nearly completed puzzle. I could never find a piece to fit, it was never difficult to put one piece aside and go back to the box. Just like my grandfather taught me, I completed the edges of my puzzle first, I had an existing framework. I propped up the puzzle box, picture side up and nestled it over the bottom box so as keep it upright. I kept comparing the pieces to the picture, to the in-progress puzzle.

In my late twenties I finally met someone who matched the picture. I couldn’t figure out how, at first, but it was a definite match. The analogy ends here, of course, because you can’t just pop a person into your existing schema. Like the addition of Mary Poppins to an otherwise un-exceptional English household, one person blows out the edges. You must begin again. You build the edges around yourselves.

Begin we did. Not consciously, of course, but everyone begins somewhere. We began in my eventual concession to a friend: yes, you may give the new guy at work my number. These were pre-Skype days, and we talked at night after his work day was over and I had Colby in bed. I sat on my back steps with the cordless land line phone squished between my shoulder and my left ear, a glass of Malbec frequently in my hand. Eventually we met, and our awkward first date gave way to more dates which eventually led to me, standing over our shared bathroom sink, using the neti pot because I have some syphilitic mutant cold, and shouting holy shit, Matt! come look at what just came out of my nose! That’s the end game, friends, finding someone who will look at your snot.

And even though I am conscious of my desire to squeeze Matt into my ideal-husband mold, it still happens. He resists, which gives me an odd sense of faith. If he never easily complies, doesn’t that make for less of a chance he will feel robbed of himself in the years to come? Maybe each shitty mustache, the constant refusal to get a hair cut; maybe that all means that he will hold on to himself through this marriage. It will prevent me from losing myself within him.

This marriage thing, well, I read too much Doris Lessing in my early twenties. I could never get how the balance would work. How is it even remotely fucking possible that you can spend your entire life with someone and retain your self? Add children to the mix, and the proverbial game is over. I want to posit an alternative: What if the nature of change isn’t a loss of self,  but an opportunity for growth?

1 weird person + 1 weird person = 1 incredibly weird couple
1 weird person + 1 weird person = 1 incredibly weird couple

So frequently when Matt and I argue, I find myself thinking, This is not what I want my life to be like, this is not what I imagined. As I get older I am realizing that these statements, and my idealized marriage situation are never reflections of real and actual life. I used to fling around statements like, I am only going to get married once. Really. I could rattle off a list of pronouncements I’ve made on marriage that would make you simultaneously cringe and look at me with the “aww, honey, soon you’ll know” face.

I am less hesitant these days, as we move closer to the aisle. I’ve been able to loosen some of my long-held beliefs about what a marriage should be like, and this is the most healthy and liberating thing I’ve accomplished in a long time. I’ve been able to realize Matt as an actual human being who gets to have input in our life – as opposed to the benevolent golem I had created.

My knowledge and opinions on marriage have the shape of an inverted pyramid. Where I once knew so much, and now have less, but maybe more important knowledge.What I’m left with is this:

Our marriage will be whatever it is. We will do the best we can with the tools we have, and we will love each other even when we don’t love each other.

 

Father’s Day Wrap-Up

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Matt and I went to the Hot Rods day at Owl’s Head Transportation museum today. It was awesome- the bus picture here was one of my favorites.

Although I am always thinking about the amount of parenting Matt does (without the official title), I thought of it even more today.

We fished off Rockland’s breakwater after the car show, and then met my family at a local lobster pound. We wrapped up our day with a trip to see his parents. I had an allergic reaction while we were out and about and had to make an emergency Benadryl purchase.

Now I am in bed, talking to all of you. I’m puffy, itchy, and so so grateful for the dads in my life.

Hungry and Harried?

Make this!

Today was so gorgeous I knew I wouldn’t want to spend much time in the kitchen. Because I picked this super easy meal (a Bittman inspired chili-type dish), I had time to play ball with Colby, hang multiple loads of laundry on the line, and clean the yard (we look a little less like a junkyard now).

Here’s the recipe:

Place a few glugs of o.o. in a large pan. Add 1 lb 90% lean ground beef (at 90% lean you don’t need to drain the grease- I’m a lazzzy cook). Cook on med high. Drain two 15 oz cans of chickpeas, reserving one cup of liquid. Add chickpeas and stir. Once the chickpeas start popping (10 or so minutes), add 1 tsp good chili powder and 2 tsp cumin. note: this is always too spicy for me but I forget to fix it the next time around. I guess what I’m saying is: season to taste. Add a few cloves minced garlic. Stir around and add the reserved liquid. Scrape off all the yummy bits from the bottom of the pan. Once the liquid is no longer too liquid-y, take off heat. Add salt and pepper to taste.

I serve this with roasted garlic bread slices which I toast and butter. Today I put a handful of baby kale in the bottom of each of our bowls and spooned the chili (not sure what the hell else you’d call this. “Looks like dog food but tastes real good”?) on top of it. The heat steamed the kale just enough. Even Colby liked it.

20 minutes start to finish.

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A Post In Which Heather Falls Out Of The Canoe And Is Very Scared

It was a day of firsts. Our first swim while canoeing. The first time I’ve changed in front of my in-laws. Cheers (see me holding up my cup of Sleepytime tea?).

We were so thankful for dry weather that the intermittent clouds were no problem. Matt and I took the Forester, freighted with gear, out Route 9 and toward camp. We drank coffee and ate breakfast and had a rare, but much-needed, visit.

Once at camp I settled in with a stack of grading while Matt attempted to get his old VW Rabbit (1 out of 4) running. His family arrived, and with them, lots of wedding talk. His father asked me, “Why can’t you just elope like normal people?”.

Said Father and Matt’s brother dropped us, our canoe and gear off, and we whooshed by them shortly. Us, water everywhere; them, safely on shore, fishing and shooting video.

Ledge Falls from Heather J Webb on Vimeo.

We knew we’d have big water today, but I certainly didn’t foresee what was to come.

Do I look nervous? Maybe I'm wondering whether I should eat that piece of warm bacon pizza?
Do I look nervous? Maybe I’m wondering whether I should eat that piece of warm bacon pizza?

We took some pics as we scouted the most difficult piece of our run. We were on the East Branch of the Union River and prepping to go over Ledge Falls. This spot has given us difficulty in the past, but usually because the water was TOO low.

Long story short, we dumped it.

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Ledge Falls
Ledge Falls

I was pretty convinced that I was going to die. I was stuck for a few seconds but managed to wiggle my foot free and made sweet love to a huge rock. Once I was perched on the rock I was able to grab the canoe rope (Thanks, Matt for saving the canoe!) and haul it over to my rock. I flopped in, Matt hopped in, and we were back on our way. The rest of the trip was cold and wet, but we survived. Oddly, it was fun. We had a few more sections of fast water and then, poof, we were done. Matt built me a fire and I stood by it and wrung out my clothes while we waited for his parents.

Now we’re home and dry. Laundry is done and I am too.

Have a great week, friends.

xoxo

Who’s Bringing Up Baby?

As I ambivalently entertain the idea of having another child, few concerns overwhelm me like the prospect of finding adequate and affordable child care. Well, that and whether or not I can handle another teenager.  This article in The Atlantic doesn’t help.

I have the luxury, now, of telling Colby to hitch a ride to practice with another family. If I’m stuck late at work, I can call his school and send him to the very reasonably priced after-school care program. It wasn’t always this way.

Mama and Colby
Mama and Colby

During Colby’s infancy I was terrified of day care centers. Irrationally? Maybe, but terror is terror. I struggled to attend college part-time and made use of the online classes which were just coming into being. My advisor recognized my struggle at the end of one semester and recommended we “explore a judicious use of day care”. She told me how a group of faculty members, parents, banded together to keep funding for the University day care system, and how we needed to make use of it in order to keep it. I later met some of the women who fought for this, and we should all be grateful for their service. I got on the wait-list and started looking for local child care providers in the small town I lived in.

When I returned to school full-time as a commuter student, Colby spent his days with a dear woman he called ‘Nana’. For him and the few other children who were there, it was like spending the day at grandma’s. We returned to the area a few years later and he started school. Most days (because I didn’t make enough to pay even Nana) he would ride the bus to me at school. On a late day, though, he would take the bus to Nana’s with the rest of her kids. Through all of these years, she always made time for us, the parents, and pick-up time often turned into a round of gossip, or advice-giving and problem-solving. She knit blankets for her kids at Christmas. She was irreplaceable.

Our spot eventually came up for university day care, and shortly after, university family housing. I found a wonderful, family-friendly part-time job. The pieces of my future career came together in this year. The university child-care program was fantastic, as promised. We are still close with families we met during our time there. Colby thrived and moved on to preschool at our local Y, another blessing.

Between these golden days and Colby’s school years, I accepted a job that paid little, but would offer the experience I needed. My contract provided for child-care, but when I toured that squalid and over-crowded facility, I knew we couldn’t stay. Two weeks later we were on a plane back home.

We got lucky. I was able to be home with Colby during his infancy, but mostly because there was no place to take him if I did work outside the home. We lived in a town with one, perennially full, day care. Colby’s Nana had an opening at just the right time when he was very young, and again when he was school-aged.  Without Nana, UMaine childcare and the Y, my career trajectory would have ended.

It so happens that people talk about this town, and other small, rural towns as dens of welfare iniquity. But mamas and papas, what the hell do you do when there is no one to take care of your babies? When faced with low-quality (read: dangerous) child care or none at all?

Please, everyone. Even if you don’t have children or yours are grown – talk about this. Ask your legislators about this. And hug whomever is taking care of your babies.

Dinner: Do’s and Don’ts

#2 on my comfort food list
#2 on my comfort food list

Early in our courtship, Matt and I found a strong common thread in the importance of family in our lives. Family dinner, for us, was non-negotiable. This happened early enough for me NOT to know how weird he thought my vegetarian chili was, but far enough in to know we were both serious about the idea. Fast forward four  years and a million  (good, bad and ugly) dinners, and you can find us at 6:30 on any school night; Matt  outside planting bulbs, Colby still stinky from baseball practice and upstairs finishing his homework, and mama on the couch, drinking a beer and looking up the recipes. With luck, the table is set before 9 o’clock.

The concept of eating together was easy to embrace. The act of creating a family meal every.damn.night took some time (and many nights of cereal or PBJs)  to figure out. Notice I didn’t say master. However, in the cyclone that is modern working life, I’ve been able to shake out some basic rules for family dinner. See Jenny Rosentrach’s 100 Rules of Dinner for the best advice ever (especially rules 24, 26, 49 and 50).

Sunday – Big, green salads all around. Leftovers for Colby and Matt – baked beans and beans and rice. Do give yourself one night a week to get rid of whatever is ready to go in your refrigerator. Try to find one big, unifying ingredient like a loaf of good bread, a soup or ‘whatever’s left in the crisper salads (see above). Let everyone else pick and choose from the contents of the refrigerator. You get a family meal, a clean refrigerator and a clean conscience (nothing’s wasted!).

Monday – Baseball practice.  This macaroni and cheese served with three huge heads of broccoli (roasted in oo, s&p).

Step 1. Step 2.
Step 1. Step 2.

Don’t be afraid to eat later than everyone else in America. Keep a box of granola bars and a bag of apples handy for the in-between hours. Eating late is better than eating in shifts. Also, don’t feel guilty if this just.isn’t.going.to.work on any given night. Life demands flexibility. If we eat before 7 p.m. it is a miracle comparable to the virgin birth.

Tuesday – Baseball practice. Tacos with all the fixings Colby changes in the car after practice and goes straight to watch his school’s speech competition. It is now buffet style nacho night. Don’t be afraid to change plans.

Wednesday – Baseball game, Rx appointment.  Parmesan breadsticks with Portland Pie Rosemary Garlic pizza dough and big salads. Do plan easy meals for busy days.

Thursday – Baseball practice. Faculty meeting. Grill all around: chicken thighs, corn and veg kabobs. Do choose something to do at the table when everyone is grumpy. I refused to let anyone watch television during dinner because I was SURE it would ruin the whole fucking point of family dinner. I mean, aren’t you supposed to bond? Talk about work and school and life? The short answer is: In your dreams, mama. I’m convinced that watching tv is less damaging than watching mom and dad give each other the stink eye from across the table or demanding an answer to “how was your day” from a surly teenager. Last summer we watched The Walking Dead on Netflix. Now we’re watching X-Files. If we feel like talking, we talk over it. If not, we bond over our shared disgust at Scully’s refusal to believe. Also, delegate. Matt grills, I bake.

Friday – Baseball practice. Buttered and toasted English Muffins and poached eggs with fruit. That chardonnay I’ve been eying all week. Don’t plan a difficult meal for a Friday night. You work, right? Don’t do this to yourself. End your week nice and easy and plan a beverage pairing.

Saturday – Drum lessons and travel soccer try-outs. Take out. Put take-out on the menu. This usually happens on game days for us, but I’m sick of take-out pizza and if I want anything else I would have to drive. So – take out day is Saturday this week.

This meant-for-Monday-night post is finally ready for you. Have a great week, enjoy the sunshine and take it easy.

xoxo

Heather

Cliche as it may be, it’s the little things.

Photo from: http://www.myfountainonline.com/vortex-releases-new-issue
Photo from: http://www.myfountainonline.com/vortex-releases-new-issue

Over the last few weeks, I’ve realized that it often takes the teeniest, tiniest happening to throw you back into a world of suck. But on the flip side, the teeniest, tiniest things can keep you from sliding into the abyss.

The world of suck is not my story to tell, but I need to shout out to my friends, Matt, Colby, the pups and the random people who saw me ugly crying through every stoplight on Stillwater and the Target parking lot. You’ve done exactly what I needed, whether it was providing hugs, patience, aggressive face and ear licking or just politely turning your head. Thank you.

For example:

  • a colleague saw me stomping up the corridor to deliver yet another phone to the assistant principal, she placed a chocolate treat in my mailbox the morning after. spot on, and thanks.
  • Matt went ice fishing for three days (men, God knows we miss you, but there is nothing like three days with the television off, no extra shit to pick up (or shit to be heard for not picking up after myself). amen.
  • Matt returned after ice fishing. 1. He didn’t die. 2. We had time to miss each other. 3. He relieved me of fire coaxing duties.
  • Colby came to yoga with me, silently drew in his sketch book the entire time and then we had a fantastic meal at 11 Central. Friends, teach your children to enjoy good food. It pays dividends.
  • I ran. Slow and halting and wheezing, I ran. And the sun was shining and the sky was blue and I saw a heron, my favorite bird, in the road.
  • As I type, Colby is helping clean the house and Matt has Easter dinner preparations underway. Do you know what I have to do? Make a bundt cake. That is IT. Halle-freaking-lujah. I get to barricade myself in my sunshiny bedroom to work. They’ve got it under control, and they also have my eternal gratitude.

Whether this weekend finds you celebrating the resurrection of Jesus, the Passover, Ishtar, or green grass and sunshine; I hope it is restful and inspiring. Find something to be grateful for, accomplish something, and get outside to breathe this fresh spring air.

Stretch Marks

The party begins.
The party begins.

Oh, my baby.

late night Apples to Apples starring: Uncle Ben
late night Apples to Apples starring: Uncle Ben
We had Dash and Bella's dutch baby pancakes for breakfast. :)
We had Dash and Bella’s dutch baby pancakes for breakfast. 🙂

Last week we celebrated Colby’s 12th birthday. His final birthday before he is truly and fully a teenager. This year we move from Caring for your School Age Child: Ages 5-12 to Get Out of My Life, But First Could You Take Me and Cheryl to the Mall.

I started reading up early. Go figure.

Most years, I spend Colby’s birthday week in equal parts mourning and awe. I look down at what is left of my mom boobs, grateful they did what I needed them to (what 20-year-old college student can afford formula?) and sad they now are slipping away, like dropped eggs on toast, sliding sliding toward the ground. I tearfully flip through old family albums and baby pictures, in awe that we have survived. Neither one of us is in jail (kid or adult) yet, we are functional in that we make it to school most every day and purport to be well-adjusted and contributing human beings. Most of the time. Every year I use this week like most people use the first week of a new year. I think about where we’ve been, what I’ve done well (and not so well) and what I can anticipate for this new year. This year, though, I find myself not sad about the slipping away of Colby’s childhood, but the gradual reduction of my influence. My job is not done, nor will it ever be, but adolescents turn out, not in. The clay is beginning to harden.

Mama and Colby
Mama and Colby

Research shows that most children are the people they will become by the time they reach adolescence. This is scary, but it just is. At first, this terrified me. “Fuck!” I thought. “I totally totally fucked this up! Why did I need to move that frequently? Could I have lived longer with his father? Would it have helped?” Then I poured a glass of wine and realized if most of us are okay (therapy bills notwithstanding), my kid’s probably going to be fine. Also, I know that now is not the time to second-guess myself. Repeat – We’re All Okay We’re All Okay We’re All Okay.

Oh, blue eyes, you're killin' me.
Oh, blue eyes, you’re killin’ me.

I’m needing some armor as we move forward, Colby and Matt and I, into this wild territory of adolescence. Without question, the seven years of middle and high school were the absolute worst of my life. I have a few choice memories that I keep in my pocket like a worry stone. The rest I’ve boxed up and put away until I have enough medication and/or therapists to work on it. Like a circle of hell, those years. I know I’m not alone here. And after a lot of thinking and a lot of xanax, I realize that I have to relinquish the fear that Colby’s will be as dreadful and wrenching and life-altering as mine. Because it might be, or maybe not. Like life, the only part of this I can control is myself, well, except for all the parental controls I’ve put on every electronic device in the house. I’ve got that shit down.

What I can do now is breathe and love and be present.

I can attempt to yell “Just. Put. Your FUCKING BOOTS ON” with less frequency.

I can cook. Because we all know that food = love.

I can drive. He’s gonna need to get places. Then I can buy him a car with the highest safety rating available. And a black box. Maybe not.

I can continue to ask questions even if I know he won’t answer.

I can embrace realistic consequences instead of punitive punishments.

I can say “I’m sorry” and “I was wrong” and “You’re right. Let’s talk about this”.

I can start thinking of something really neat to do to him the first time he calls me a “fucking bitch”. Mamas – you cringe, but we need to prepare.

I can do more listening and less talking.

I can breathe and love and be present.

Mad mama  love. xoxo.

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Who’s that baby in the backpack on a mountain? COLBY!

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Winter Photo Dump

That makes me giggle. Believe me, I am not becoming more mature or less impressed with scatalogical or vaginal humor thanks to this book.  You should read it, but only if you won’t judge me and my love of it.

Anyway. This is what’s been happening in our neck of the woods.

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a friendly reminder

Because I inherited a set of sub-par genes, I needed to have fasting blood work done. I am a coffee fiend, so Matt left me this kind note to remind my morning-zombie self to abstain.Then he gottheeffout before he had to deal with me.

Trey Anastasio Band
Trey Anastasio Band
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The morning after!

My dear friend (and concert partner) and I once took Colby to see Phish in Portland, ME on a school night. Neither my mother nor his teacher were impressed. But hey! Family values! We all do things differently. We see music. This most recent time, though, fortuitously occurred on a long weekend. It was lovely and affirming and Colby slept the whole way home so Angie and I could gossip.

Working time.
Working time.

I’m not exactly sure what’s going on here, but I obviously thought it was photo worthy. Sometimes I have to be the foreman on our homework, work-site. It’s, uh, not so much fun.

Love.
Love.

And I read this book. And also this book. And this one. And another one that was meh. The one book you all need to buy and read, though, is We Were the Kennedys by Monica Wood. I took a class in memoir with Monica while she was writing it, and I smiled as I read because I could recognize her method as so completely her. She tells the story of an industrial Maine town, but at the same time she tells the story of every industrial town. This is a story for everyone who witnessed the end to a simpler way of life, and for everyone who wonders what that life could have been like. Buy it in hardcover, because you will read it many times.

the things I can get away with here!
the things I can get away with here!

My friend Jane let me babysit her delightful little girl. I promptly fed her sugar, got her dirty, let her dress herself, and whisked her off to a rowdy middle-school basketball game. It was the best day ever.

on the court
on the court

And when did my boy turn into a middle-schooler anyway? No fair.

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All Saint's Catholic School International Fair 2013
All Saint’s Catholic School International Fair 2013

One of my favorite parenting books says that whenever you have doubts about your children (say you suspect they are heading down that road of sociopathic behavior or maybe that they are learning how to be drug dealers when you’re in the other room on facebook), anyway, the book says when you have doubts you should observe your child in his or her natural environment. When you have a school-aged child, that environment is pretty much anywhere that is not home and not directly involving you.  International Fair night made me feel better. Much better. Phew. Even though I could use some – nevermind.

Colby's favorite baby
Colby’s favorite baby

My friends Megan and Justin are new members of the parental clan, and Colby loves their baby. As do I. Just look at his little shadow!

Animal!
Animal!

Colby attended his first District V festival with his school’s jazz band. They were awesome, of course, and scored well enough to compete again at the end of this month. Wish them luck!

Camp kitchen
Camp kitchen
Catan, yo.
Catan, yo.
My fish, Bella, my fish.
My fish, Bella, my fish.
Boys dutifully writing in the camp journal.
Boys dutifully writing in the camp journal.

Everyone has finally realized that when I say “I’m NEVER going ice fishing again”, I mean it. I am, though, quite happy to cook on the wood stove and read books while the boys are out fishing. Also, peeing outside when it’s 20 degrees provides perspective you can’t get anywhere else.

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Colby and his friend Cam
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Oh, me and Chops.

We took in the last game played in the Bangor Auditorium. It didn’t hurt to see my alma mater (and a group of wonderful young men, some former students of mine) win the gold ball.

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Sam goes to the vet. Her little wagging tail says “I love Veazie Vet Clinic”!
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Bella is just plain happy. All smiles.
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And Colby outgrows the pediatrician’s exam table.
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I do not support the ‘Joe-Dirt Impersonator’ career option.
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Game over.

Matt grew his hair out all winter. This was fine until he decided to cut his own bangs one morning. Any woman who has ever cut her own bangs knows exactly what happened next. They sprung up. It looked as if he had either passed out by the fire and they were burned off OR he had passed out on the couch and had bacon grease in them so the dogs chewed them off. It was horrific. I couldn’t even look at him. When he finally agreed to cut his hair I went to bed, dejected, he had refused to just. go. get. a. fucking. haircut. He woke me up 30 minutes later with the joe dirt mullet and blacked out tooth. I went back to bed, sure that I would have to deal with Joe in the morning. Much to my surprise, I woke to find a nearly normal looking human next to me. I finally won.  Heather-1, Matt- 87.

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I like to grade wearing my Pink Floyd snuggie. Thanks to all my awesome freshmen who picked it out!
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but being comfortable doesn’t make me more tactful
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ahh.

I am coming back to my mat thankfully and more frequently these days. We have an interlude of a slower-paced life in-between sports seasons, and I plan on making good use of it.

That’s it for now, friends. I have a  piece of salmon to turn into supper and a kiddo who needs cold medicine and a new box of tissues.

Push ‘Pause’

Like this - but in a snow storm
Like this – but in a snow storm

 

 

When people ask me how we’re doing, how life is, I inevitably reply “crazy” and then immediately feel like an asshole.  Here’s the thing – we are living the same life most of you are living (or have lived through OR are quickly on your way to experiencing).  I, WE, are no different from any other working family with active, school-aged children. What I do is not exceptional, it’s what we  all do.

Nearly every day is a sprint-to-the-finish mission to  just effing lay down. We herd kids, we drive kids, maybe we even teach kids. We go from sports practice to music practice to off-season sports practice to homework time to are-you-seriously-telling-me-your-science-book-is-at-school and where did you leave your pants?!  time. I’m not sure about you, but by the time I’m halfway through my dinner glass of wine I am ready to hit the ground. As in, I would curl up ON the ground, with or without a blanket, and go to sleep if anyone would let me. But the dogs need to go out and the dishes aren’t done and my work bag is glaring at me from the corner and, insert your own after-dinner demon. I do not tend to end my evenings reflecting on how well my day has gone on the parent, partner, teacher scale.

Thank God this has finally happened.

Snow came yesterday and graciously canceled all after school activities, freeing up two or three extra after-school hours for us. I had a migraine and I had papers to grade, but had the odd ambition to run and swim. I’ll fill you in soon on exactly why and how fitness and general self-care left my life for a few months, but for now just know that this was a rare event. I decided to pick Colby up from school on-time and head over to the University of Maine rec center for a run and a swim.

Colby was both compliant AND excited (an anomaly these days) and packed quickly. I planned for him to use the indoor track with me to run and then hit the pool and hot tub. When I came out of the changing room (single mothers with male children – we need an entirely different post about the inherent problems with this system) he was nowhere to be found. Three frantic text messages and ten minutes later I spotted him on the basketball court with a bunch of his friends playing a pickup game. Once I was done being pissed about his lack of communicating his whereabouts I was elated – I got my solo run upstairs!

bball-courts

After I finished my (first in a looooong time) ssllllloooooowwwww and sweaty two miles, during which I realized some running pants actually  do  require you to wear underwear, I went downstairs and found Colby like this:

post-gym Colby

Happy and sweaty, just like his Mama.

 

We swam in the pool and soaked in the hot tub and left feeling like entirely different (and better) people. We kept asking each other “Uh – why don’t we do this all the time?”.

It took nearly a million years to get home on the snowy roads, but it was the best spent time we’ve had in so very long.

Here’s hoping that I won’t forget this small fact: we need to play, to hit pause in the general craziness of our lives, if we plan on enjoying any of it.

Best wishes for a great day, friends.