Cough, cough, cough, cough, cough, cough, gag, hack, cough!
I hate being sick.
I also hate doing science projects.
And I hate whiners, so I’m sending myself to my room right now.
Pictures of my life in a thousand words . . . more or less.
Cough, cough, cough, cough, cough, cough, gag, hack, cough!
I hate being sick.
I also hate doing science projects.
And I hate whiners, so I’m sending myself to my room right now.
My daughter has to coil herself into my lap now, she’s so long. She curls her legs up and scrunches her head down to fit.
She has discovered the joy of the small chair. I bought a little kid-sized table for my kitchen and she carries the little chair around so she can reach stuff. Today, while I showered, she brought her orange chair from her room to the bathroom, so she could stand on the counter and brush her teeth. She likes to make faces at herself while she brushes. And she handles the toothpaste tube by herself, proclaiming, “I can do it all . . . by . . . my . . . self!”
She woke up last night at 1:00 a.m. and when I told her it was nighttime, still, she agreed to be rocked. I picked her up and then turned off the bright light. Alarmed that I was going to put her back in her crib, she shouted, “I rock you!” I love how she still says things like, “I hold you” instead of “You hold me.”
She sounds emphatic most of the time because she puts the “not” right in front of the action. For instance, “Today I am going to NOT hit my friend.” Or “I am going to NOT cry when you put me to bed.” “I am going to NOT pee my pants!”
At night, she arranges a collection of seven dollies in her crib on the foot end. She covers the dollies carefully with a crocheted blanket. Then, she settles back on her own little pillow, pulling a tiny napkin-sized crocheted blanket over herself. This miniature blanket is meant for a doll and covers only her belly. She insists on following this routine each night.
I just turned into “Mommy.” For a long time I’ve been “Mom” and “Mama,” but now suddenly and without official notification, she calls me “Mommy.”
She passed gas the other day. She feigned surprise, looked at me and said, “Did you hear that? What was that?” Then she grinned. I wonder where she learned that? (The correct answer to her question is what my dad taught me to say when faced with such a question: “Spiders barking!”)
I’m reading Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller. One of the chapters is called, “Church: How I Go Without Getting Angry,” and in that chapter, he talks about the church he attends in Portland called Imago Dei. He mentions “this friend from Seattle named Mark who was the pastor of a pretty cool church near the University of Washington, in the village.”
And I realized that my church is not cool. I kind of felt the littlest bit wistful, realizing how uncool our church is, too. If churches had flavor, that cool church would be mocha (and more) and our church would be vanilla.
I was cleaning up the kitchen table after dinner (which my long-suffering husband rustled up since I am still trying to not die from coughing). For some reason, I was thinking about what “kids these days” (I always feel like an old-fogey when I use that phrase and it makes me laugh) are wearing. Specifically, which fashions are cool.
And I realized that I couldn’t pick cool clothes out of a well-lit store. I notice what girls wear, but I can’t really tell you what cool boys wear. This would be problematic for my kids, if only they actually cared about their appearances.
I’ve never been trendy, really, except for a time in the eighties when big hair was the rage. My hair just happened to be long, blond and frizzy. I looked like a member of a hair-band. The fashions of the time, leggings and big shirts, worked well for me. There was a time when I could at least recognize the hippest songs on the radio and even hum along.
But my life’s intesections with “cool” have been mostly accidental, I’m afraid. I’m terrifically, overwhelmingly not cool.
I don’t have an iPod, nor any digital music device. And I don’t want one.
I couldn’t care less about enormous, expensive leather bags, nor small cupcake-sized dogs to carry around in them.
I can’t hum even a line of “Hollaback Girl”.
I don’t “get” rap and I can’t stand how everything is misspelled and mispronounced in modern music.
I don’t drink anything stronger that Diet Coke.
I never watched “Sex in the City” and we don’t have HBO. Or TiVo.
I still use Blogger for my blog and I use a plain, old, prefab template. I have no polls, no clocks, no “100 Things About Me.”
I drive a 1993 Mercury Sable.
I live in the land of Starbucks, yet I don’t drink coffee, fancy or plain.
I used to want to be cool, but that was back in 1978. My parents never bought me cool clothes, nor did we go on any cool vacations. I had no cool friends and my hair never feathered in the cool fashion of the day. (Natural curls do not “feather,” especially in a rainy climate.) Of course, when you are thirteen, you want to be cool because you don’t realize how much more to life there is than blending in like a chameleon.
And when you’re forty, you realize it’s hopeless and that you never will be cool and that furthermore, who cares? Now I know why my dad wore those hideous shoes and flannel shirts with holes in the elbows. He’d given up on being cool, too.
Cool, shmool. Who needs it?
I wrote a long post, but pretty soon, it sounded like this to me, “and so I . . . and then I . . . and I felt . . . . and blah blah blah blah blah.” I bored even myself.
So, I’m going to just summarize.
All week, I’ve been suffering from a virus which is trying to kill me. My head aches even worse when I cough. I’ve been hot, then cold, feverish, then shivering. Each day seems worse. My daughter has it, too, and really, the only thing worse than being sick is being sick and having a sick whiny 3-year old begging you to hold her when you already are holding her.
What I hate is that when you are a mother and you are sick, the only part that matters is that you are a mother. You have no sick days, no one to stroke your forehead and bring you gingerale and tell you to just stay in bed all day.
I hate that.
Not even a month ago, I proclaimed
Jennifer Hyatte was stupid. And by “stupid,” I meant “a person who is not very bright.”
Because how bright can you be if your idea of living happily ever after involves helping a felon escape and murdering a prison guard?
Then, a few days ago, I wrote with some sympathy about criminals who look a lot like us. And by “us,” I meant me, of course.
Some time today, in the midst of my illness-induced stupor, I remembered my proclamation about Jennifer Hyatte a few weeks back. I stopped cold. My glaring inconsistencies flashed to neon light and I broke into a cold sweat (although, admittedly, that could have just been the fever). Why, when I read about Jennifer Hyatte shooting a prison guard to free her husband, the prisoner, did I roll my eyes and shake my head at her actions? I easily sorted her into the Stupid Category. And yet, when I read about Judy Brown, who taught at the college I attended, I sat with my mouth agape, stunned. I didn’t think, how stupid is she? in suburban judgment. I felt pity, sorrow that she essentially drove her life off a cliff for love.
I know for a fact that Judy Brown is not stupid. I could not easily slide her into the Stupid Category, which presented a problem for me. Why would someone do something so stupid if one was not stupid? It was so simple to stamp “Stupid” on the forehead of Jennifer Hyatte and move along. That could never be me, I thought, because I am so bright and all.
I didn’t feel any pity whatsover for Jennifer Hyatte and the thing she did for love. I figured if you are stupid and you do stupid things, you ought to pay for it. And none of that has much to do with me.
The truth is that if you do bad things, hoping that good things will result, you are mistaken. Never in the history of the world has it been possible to plant pumpkin seeds and have tomato plants sprout. You get what you plant. (I know all about this, being smarter than the average bear.)
Jennifer Hyatte wanted to live happily ever after with the man of her dreams. So, she did a series of bad things and ended up with . . . bad things.
Sabine Bieber wanted babies in her care to nap peacefully. So, she did a bad thing and ended up with . . . bad things.
Judy Brown wanted someone else’s spouse for herself. So, she did a bad thing and ended up with . . . bad things.
The small bad things ended up sprouting and growing into giant bad things, it seems. And did all the bad stuff start with self-absorption? Some people call self-absorption sin. (Just tonight, I came across that idea in Blue Like Jazz by Donald Miller. I can’t think of a better description of what sin is, really. I’ve always been told that sin is “missing the mark,” as in missing a target, but why? What’s the motivation? Self-absorption.)
If I line up the pieces of these stories, I find self-absorption central in each one. I find self-absorption in my own life, too, even though the very nature of my life forces me to put other people before me. Isn’t that what Jesus asked us to do? To love our neighbor as ourselves? To serve one another? The farther we get from following His instructions, the more myopic we become, until at some point, we can’t see beyond our grabbing hands.
The more we do bad, hoping for good.
Just like Jennifer, Sabine and Judy. Just like me.
I’m suffering from an illness that makes my head explode every time I cough. So, I asked Ben Stein to write my blog post today.
Okay. Just kidding. He wrote this for The American Spectator.
I especially liked point number twelve. Yesterday, I wondered aloud to my husband if liberal Democrats who wish to increase federal government involvement in our lives (healthcare, schools, social programs) are having second thoughts?
Way back when I was a new bride, I read Mary Pride’s The Way Home. Her ideas prompted me to consider homeschooling my children, even though my children didn’t exist yet.
My husband I turned out to be infertile and by the time we adopted twins, I had a head jammed full of ideas. I listened to Dr. Dobson (before he got all political) and really knew that I knew The Right Way to parent. I would homeschool them and they would be eager students and obedient children and I would manage to look cute throughout their childhoods. Oh, and I’d have lots of girlfriends to call who would meet us for playdates and educational field trips. My children would study museum paintings, sketchbooks in hand.
My kids were supposed to learn to read early and spend hours coloring with unbroken crayons. They were supposed to be naturally tidy and easy-going. They were supposed to always wear double-knotted shoes when they went outside.
But my boys surprised me. They wore socks outside while they dug holes in the dirt. They threw sand at each other. They didn’t want to listen to books and they never met a crayon they didn’t want to break and then throw. My blue-eyed twin challenged my leadership every day, every hour, nearly every minute. My brown-eyed twin whined and threw his apple-juice cup every single time he finished. Every time. Sometimes it would hit me and I would cry.
We lived in a very rural, poor area of Michigan with terrible schools and I decided that I would homeschool them. Before that arrived though, several events occurred which jumbled up our plans. First, I became pregnant (not an easy task for an infertile woman), and then we moved.
We moved the September the twins were old enough to go to kindergarten. My baby was seven months old and I’d been babysitting for two years. I was eager to spend time alone with my baby. The school district in our new home enjoyed an excellent reputation. So, off they went, much to my joy.
I admit it. By then, I really needed a break from them. These boys that God gave me were nothing like the embroidering-stitching girls I’d expected. I wasn’t so sure of my ability to teach them and to juggle a baby and schooling.
Besides that, my husband is a pastor. That makes my kids Pastor’s Kids (PKs). PKs have a decidely different life than your average child. They face higher expectations from their church community, for starters. Their peers can ostracize them based on their dad’s job alone. We did not want our kids to be seen as the weird pastor’s kids who wore pants too short and eyeglasses too thick, the kids who were isolated from life. Is that a stereotype? Sure, it is. But there’s a bit of truth to it and we were seeking a balance.
Their first years at school were okay. My brown-eyed twin struggled with writing and reading. The teachers sort of shrugged their shoulders. His second-grade teacher said, “Well, it’s only second grade. It’s not college,” when I raised my concerns. He struggled more than his twin brother and I suspected more than most children. He constantly lagged behind in math and writing and reading.
My blue-eyed twin excelled in everything but handwriting. But he’d come home so crabby, so irritable. As the years progressed, his foul moods increased. I didn’t know until much later that starting in fourth grade, the other kids had begun to target him for teasing and bullying. He has a strong personality (remember how he challenged me constantly as a toddler and preschooler?) and odd mannerisms. He wanted nothing more than to be a cool kid and yet, coolness eluded him. He tried too hard.
During fifth grade, my brown-eyed twin struggled for passing grades. His teacher noted that if a leaf fell from a tree outside the window, my son would lose his focus. He never caused trouble, though. He just sat quietly and didn’t do his work. Homework every night was torture–and he didn’t like it much, either.
We decided then that we needed to intervene, to save our boy. Sixth grade would involve a confusing change of classes and less supervision by teachers. More homework, more responsibility, more demands. I did not want him to end up being the kid smoking illicit cigarettes in the parking lot while skipping class, so we brought him home for school. Our blue-eyed twin asked to school at home, too.
Initially, I planned to homeschool in the traditional sense. That is, I intended to piece together curriculum and teach them myself. I dreaded this because my daughter was two years old then and extremely clingy. At the same time, our school district decided to offer an at-home program using an online curriculum. The program falls under the category of “alternative education,” and the curriculum was provided at no cost to us because our children are still enrolled in the public school district. Therefore, the public school district gets tax dollars for our children. We get curriculum at no cost. We do have to follow school requirements. I log attendance and we meet with a teacher weekly who is “mentoring” the boys. (This year, I think we’ll be able to do the meetings by email and phone, which is a relief to me.)
I do not mind the school district having a hand in educating my children. My 7-year old is a very successful and happy public school student. He’s confident and smart and doing great. I am the product of a public school system and so is my husband. We have many friends who are teachers. But I found that these particular children, my boys, did not fare well in the public schools. They need more attention and protection.
Some homeschoolers hate the idea of a public school system offering school-at-home. Some of them believe it’s a scheme to eventually erode the rights of homeschoolers or a way to trick people back into the public school system. They do not want anyone to tell them how and when to educate their children. They are called “independent homeschoolers.” Some independent homeschoolers are quite antagonistic towards school-at-homers and believe that we are not “real” homeschoolers.
And while I completely respect their position, that’s not me. I have no qualms about accepting free curriculum, even though there are strings attached. What I do is pretty much the same as what they do. I just do it with the oversight of professional educators (though not much oversight, truthfully).
We attempt to find the middle ground as we parent our children. Not too strict and not too lenient. We shield them from inappropriate material, yet they play video games and watch television (they are currently hooked on the old episodes of “Full House”).
What I’ve discovered the longer I am a mother is that my children never read those books I did about their behavior and how I would be able to curb and control it. They are individuals. Does the fact that they share no genetic material with me make a difference? Is it that they are boys? Or the simple fact of being adopted and the pre-verbal losses they suffered? Are their personalities just foreign to me?
I don’t know, but I know this. I am doing the best I can. At this moment, at this stage in my own “full house,” I gratefully accept curriculum and the ties to the public school. The minute it stops working, we’ll reassess. Meanwhile, we impatiently await our curriculum and they are busy reading upstairs, safe and sound.
And my blue-eyed twin is no longer irritable and my brown-eyed twin isn’t lost in the shuffle.
Mothers of small children will tell you that just because you are a stay-at-home mother doesn’t mean that you get to watch daytime television, unless of course, you’re talking about Nick Jr. or Disney Playhouse. However, mothers of small babies will tell you that television keeps them company because you can only gaze into the eyes of your drooling infant for so long.
Last week, the little kids were all napping, but the baby wasn’t and I happened surf past CourtTV and caught part of the trial of Sabine Bieber. Mrs. Bieber cared for children in a daycare. She apparently valued naptime even more than I do (how can that be possible?) because she gave the little ones Diphenhydramine, aka generic Benadryl, to make them drowsy at naptime.
One-year old Dane died from her negligence. Now, Mrs. Bieber faces forty years in prison.
I used to think that a giant gulf existed between criminals and me. I judged them harshly when I considered their crimes. And yet, consider this case. You might shake your head in disbelief and wave her fingers around your temple in the universal sign for “ca-razy!”
But really, how porous are the boundaries that separate us from these women? One bad decision leads to a worse decision. A lapse in judgment shakes the foundation until you see the world crookedly and the thoughts in your own head don’t seem nuts at all. The horizon is hidden by the fog of choice after choice that soon leads you backwards, far from your original goal. Disorientation rules.
It’s all speculation, of course. Who really knows what led these women–women very much like you or your neighbor or even me–to take the steps they did? Nothing is as simple as it first appears and human behavior is more mysterious than anyone can explain.
A couple of Christmases ago, when my daughter was only three months old, my husband received a phone call from a pastor in New York. The New York pastor asked my husband to visit a girl in a nearby jail. He went several times and pieced together bits of her story. When she was released (after six weeks, as I recall), he brought her to our house so she could prepare to go home to New York. (She needed the court’s permission before she could even leave the state.)
I was worried until she walked through the door and then I saw that she was much like my own sister, a lost and wandering soul with flushed cheeks and a ponytail.
She stayed with us a week. I will never be the same again. She held my baby, helped me in the kitchen, ran errands with me and kept me company. After a week, we bought her an airline ticket, gave her cash for the bus which would shuttle her home and sent her on her way. She’s living happily ever after at the moment and I like to think that we served as a sturdy stepping stone along the way. I hope her life continues to unfold with serenity and strength.
Meanwhile, I consider the sad cases of Sabine Bieber and Judy Brown. And while my compassion used to be heaped solely upon the victims of crimes, I can’t do that anymore. I am too much like the ones sitting alone in a barred cell.
And you are, too, I suspect.
Tomorrow is the Big Day.
My 7-year old starts second grade.
My husband’s sabbatical comes to an end.
My 12-year old twins begin their second year of school-at-home (not to be confused with homeschool). Only problem is that the curriculum hasn’t arrived yet and won’t arrive until Friday, they tell me. So, we’ll head to the YMCA, I think, and sign up for homeschool P.E. and get our identification cards. This plan works only because my usual daycare baby won’t be coming tomorrow morning. Instead, I’ll have DaycareKid and his cousin, a 4-year old girl I’m watching two days this week as a favor to her mother. Working mothers have such an issue with finding appropriate childcare. It’s the headache that does not respond to ibuprofen.
Anyway.
Summer’s over, no matter what the calendar says. Farewell, my friend! See you in nine months!
And now, photos.
Here is my 7-year old son posing with my 99-year old grandmother, taken on the day we visited a few weeks ago..
Here is the beach ball birthday cake . . .(notice the fingerprints in the “sand”) . . . 

. . . and the blue-jello cups.
And finally, here is the Birthday Girl, who is now suffering from the headache-coughing virus my boys have so graciously passed along.
(And one more thing. The previous post was written using Microsoft Word with the new Blogger feature which allows you to compose with your word processor and then post directly to your blog. I like the Comic Sans font . . . what about you? Do you prefer this font?)