Every family goes through that loss of the belief in magic in their kids at some point. My oldest, Mr. Logical, has not believed in Santa since another kid gave him the skinny on the playground in third grade. Once the idea was planted, he said something to the effect of "well, that totally makes sense, because there are hundreds of millions of kids in the world and how would one person make it to all of their houses in one night?!" For him, the magic evaporated instantly in the face of logic. My middle, Mr. Sentimental, immediately heard the skinny from Mr. Logical but denies it, loudly and repeatedly. "AJ, IT DOES NOT MAKE SENSE THAT SANTA IS NOT REAL. THEN WHO IS READING THOSE LETTERS THAT WE MAILED AT THE POST OFFICE?!?" My youngest is a believer in all things magical, from unicorns to mermaids to the jolly old elf in a red suit. Which is why I took just her to see Santa this year so that no big brothers would break out into an argument about whether sleighs can fly and how 300 million presents fit into one sack. We listened to Christmas music the whole way there and back, and she talked about how much she hoped Santa would bring her the Lego set with the dolphins. I know she is growing up and that it will come soon, but first I want to enjoy this year and this moment.
Wednesday, December 20, 2017
Wednesday, October 18, 2017
Max
We are getting ready to welcome this guy, Max, to our crazy zoo. Back before we got one puppy, we were trying to figure out what kind of dog to get. Joe wanted a big dog. Julia wanted a little dog. We naively thought they would be like cats and want company. So we got a big dog and a little dog, or more accurately, two puppies, one of whom will grow into a big dog and one of whom is supposed to be 20 pounds or less. Only after picking up our first puppy and working with his trainer did I learn that it is apparently a colossally bad idea to get two puppies at once. Oops. Because I had already made a non-refundable deposit on this guy. And even more compellingly, Julia picked him out herself and is already deeply in love with the idea of him. But Max is so adorable and looks like he will be nothing but rainbows and butterflies, right? Here's hoping.
Saturday, October 14, 2017
Friday, September 8, 2017
These Moments
So true that a picture is worth a thousand words. If these pictures could talk, among the first things they would say is that when I scheduled these pictures back in March and was so thrilled to get on this photographer's schedule, I should have wondered why she had an opening still on Friday evening, August 25 when everything else for the year was booked up. I was thinking of pictures in Chicago in the summer with the beach and the city in the background. I was thinking of how beautiful Chicago is that time of year. I was thinking of how lucky I was to get that open slot. I was not thinking about how that would be the Friday after the first full week of school. When the kids are totally shot from the stress of the first week of the school year with new teachers, new classmates, new routines. Rookie mistake on my part, all the more frustrating because this was my sixth year of having kids in school. Next year, the Friday after the week of school will be marked off in red pen, as in do-not-plan-anything-for-this-night-under-any-circumstances.
The kids totally and completely were not having it during this photo session. I apologized profusely to the photographer, who was so gracious about their refusals to smile or even look at the camera. She was incredibly kind and sent me a sneak preview a few days later. I replied to tell her how grateful I was for her kind reaction to our less than polite response to her attempts to photograph us and she told me that she sends sneak peeks so that the parents can see something good came out of all the crazy of a photo shoot session. Good move on her part.
Now, if a picture can tell a thousand words about the people in these photos, it would talk about how AJ has found a new confidence in his first few weeks of fifth grade. He had a group of friends who he likes, he has a great teacher this year and he loves to play any kind of sport at recess, after school and whenever he has a free minute in between. He reads like I remember reading when I was a kid, always carrying a book around with him and reading in bed at night when he is supposed to be sleeping. In the last six months, he has learned to be better about letting the little things go that annoy him but don't really matter so much. These things consumed him when he was younger, and this is a beautiful relief in seeing him mature in this way. He is curious and loves to talk about the world.
The pictures would also tell how David has one of the kindest, sweetest hearts of any kid I know. He is always in tune with the emotions of anyone in the room and seeks to be the soother, the peacemaker, the keeper of confidences. He has mischievous blue eyes and loves to joke. He wants to be just like his big brother and to earn his brother's respect. He loves to tease his little sister and explain to her exactly how his life is harder than hers now that he is in third grade and has "way, waaay more homework than you will in first grade, Julia." He is passionate about life and full of intensity, which is one of his strengths. It can also be a challenge as he learns to let things go on the playground, with friends and in sports.
And my not-so-little Julia. The pictures would tell how she loves to sing, to dance, to twirl and to be the center of everyone's attention. How she is vibrating with excitement about the upcoming arrival of our new puppy, who she is sure will be her living stuffed animal, her co-conspirator in imaginary play and her new best friend. They will show that outgoing youngest child who can make friends anywhere we go, whether it is at the park, at the beach, at school. And the pictures will show how attached she is to her momma.
Most of all, the pictures will capture how we are together. The volume is always on loud, and there are usually three people talking at once. There is teasing and annoying and hurt feelings, and then they all come back together and we get something that captures those quiet moments when everyone is in harmony and all is right with the world. Those are the moments that I choose to remember.
The kids totally and completely were not having it during this photo session. I apologized profusely to the photographer, who was so gracious about their refusals to smile or even look at the camera. She was incredibly kind and sent me a sneak preview a few days later. I replied to tell her how grateful I was for her kind reaction to our less than polite response to her attempts to photograph us and she told me that she sends sneak peeks so that the parents can see something good came out of all the crazy of a photo shoot session. Good move on her part.
Now, if a picture can tell a thousand words about the people in these photos, it would talk about how AJ has found a new confidence in his first few weeks of fifth grade. He had a group of friends who he likes, he has a great teacher this year and he loves to play any kind of sport at recess, after school and whenever he has a free minute in between. He reads like I remember reading when I was a kid, always carrying a book around with him and reading in bed at night when he is supposed to be sleeping. In the last six months, he has learned to be better about letting the little things go that annoy him but don't really matter so much. These things consumed him when he was younger, and this is a beautiful relief in seeing him mature in this way. He is curious and loves to talk about the world.
The pictures would also tell how David has one of the kindest, sweetest hearts of any kid I know. He is always in tune with the emotions of anyone in the room and seeks to be the soother, the peacemaker, the keeper of confidences. He has mischievous blue eyes and loves to joke. He wants to be just like his big brother and to earn his brother's respect. He loves to tease his little sister and explain to her exactly how his life is harder than hers now that he is in third grade and has "way, waaay more homework than you will in first grade, Julia." He is passionate about life and full of intensity, which is one of his strengths. It can also be a challenge as he learns to let things go on the playground, with friends and in sports.
And my not-so-little Julia. The pictures would tell how she loves to sing, to dance, to twirl and to be the center of everyone's attention. How she is vibrating with excitement about the upcoming arrival of our new puppy, who she is sure will be her living stuffed animal, her co-conspirator in imaginary play and her new best friend. They will show that outgoing youngest child who can make friends anywhere we go, whether it is at the park, at the beach, at school. And the pictures will show how attached she is to her momma.
Most of all, the pictures will capture how we are together. The volume is always on loud, and there are usually three people talking at once. There is teasing and annoying and hurt feelings, and then they all come back together and we get something that captures those quiet moments when everyone is in harmony and all is right with the world. Those are the moments that I choose to remember.
Monday, September 4, 2017
Make New Friends, But Keep the Old
AJ started out August going to his first sleep away camp with Aaron, his best friend from Iowa. The two of them just clicked and they loved doing everything and nothing together, from playing video games to riding bikes, throwing the football around or catching Pokemon. It was awesome for them to have the chance to spend a week together again.
One of the hardest parts about moving was seeing the kids go through leaving their great friends from Iowa. Being so young, they haven't lived long enough to know that it is possible to make new friendships and good friendships in your new place. I remember moving enough at ten to know that it certainly feels like you will never again have such good friends as you had at your old place.
After a rough adjustment last spring, it looks like AJ has turned the corner and made a good group of friends. There is nothing I want more for my kids here in Chicago than to make friends they can count on who push them to be their best and who they feel totally comfortable around. Having parents who I feel comfortable with and like hanging around with is the icing on the cake. This looks like a great group of boys.
Here's to a fun fifth grade year.
Monday, August 21, 2017
Total Eclipse
We definitely caught the eclipse fever over here. The whole country went crazy with the desire to see something that had not been seen since 1979. Solar eclipse glasses, which probably cost about $1 to make were selling for as much as $300 on Amazon and Ebay. I was so excited to see it that I looked everywhere trying to find glasses. I drove the kids around to a couple of 7-Eleven convenience stores after reading online that they had some available for sale. Turns out they were selling dark "solar glasses" that block sunlight on a regular day for older people--the kind you can slip over a pair of regular glasses. Total scam. After going to the planetarium downtown and striking out, I tried to go to the Chicago Botanic Garden on the day of the eclipse for their eclipse watching party, but there were so many people there that the line of cars backed up onto the highway and the parking lot overflowed. After making my way back to Park Ridge, I was delighted to find that there were plenty of glasses and an eclipse watching party in our little town.
Here is a summary from the NASA website of why this is so cool:
On Monday, August 21, 2017, all of North America will be treated to an eclipse of the sun. Anyone within the path of totality can see one of nature’s most awe inspiring sights - a total solar eclipse. This path, where the moon will completely cover the sun and the sun's tenuous atmosphere - the corona - can be seen, will stretch from Salem, Oregon to Charleston, South Carolina. Observers outside this path will still see a partial solar eclipse where the moon covers part of the sun's disk.
The kids were already in school on August 21, and their school planned far enough ahead that they were able to have an eclipse watching party and let all of the students see it during school with the eclipse-approved glasses. The picture is of AJ's class watching.
Friday, June 2, 2017
Happy Mother's Day from a Tiny Baby Turtle
I got to spend Mother's Day with my mom and the kids, which made it a pretty great day. Add in breakfast in bed, kid art and a walk at the nature center where we saw a tiny baby turtle? Did I mention that Gene and Joe cooked dinner for the moms as well and we got to have dinner with Arlene? It was wonderful.
Saturday, May 27, 2017
Queen of the Monkeys
I remember taking Julia to the playground the week before kindergarten started and she could only do one or two rungs on the monkey bars, and even then only after some help getting started. Here we are in the last month of kindergarten, and she can easily pull her way across and back five or six times. Her arm muscles are noticeably bigger as well. It feels like a metaphor for kindergarten as a whole, with all of the learning and growth that happens in one short school year. She is definitely my hero and my queen of the monkeys.
Thursday, May 25, 2017
Field Trippin'
Despite all of that, we managed to have a wonderful day. The weather was perfect, the kids were well behaved and I got to see Chicago through their eyes and marvel at things that I forgot to notice after awhile, like the Marc Chagall Four Seasons mural pictured above that was right outside my law firm's office. Nothing like seeing the world through your kid's eyes to make you appreciate it a little bit more.
Thursday, May 11, 2017
Evil Princess Leia
The kids know I adore homemade Mother's Day gifts and that I start quizzing them early about what they are making me at school. AJ seemed bummed this year when I asked him. He told me that his class was doing a story about why their moms should be on the cover of People magazine, and while he liked his story, he had ruined it by making me look like an evil Princess Leia in his drawing on the cover. I told him that was awesome because the picture would definitely become part of our family lore and be told with lots of laughs for years to come. Introducing Evil Princess Leia, my alter ego. I like her already.
Wednesday, May 10, 2017
Double Thumbs Up
How can you not love this guy and his enthusiasm for life? I was in Washington DC this week for work meetings, and David's coach posted this picture on Facebook of Davey at his baseball game. It is hard for me to be away from the kids when I travel, but this definitely gave me a double thumbs up day to see his joy even from far away.
Monday, May 8, 2017
Pretend Play
I love that they both, at ages 6 and 8, are still happy to wear their costumes to their big brother's baseball game and run around the whole hour and a half playing in their own imaginary world. It feels like David is slipping in and out of imaginary play, and my sister says this is the age when he will developmentally begin to drop it. I want to hold onto it as long as I can, and I know Julia does as well.
Sunday, May 7, 2017
God Bless Davey
He made it! Davey was called on to carry the Holy Water down the aisle, which made me a bit nervous. He did look over at one point with a mischievous grin, but the Holy Water made it down the aisle with no mishaps. Davey danced and pretended to play the trumpet as a real trumpet played during the ceremony, and at one point he may have dabbed, but all in all, it was a success.
Thursday, May 4, 2017
It Fits!
We are preparing for David's First Communion this weekend, and one of the big things on the list to get ready was to try on the family blazer that has been worn for this occasion by Joe, all of his brothers, their family friend, AJ and now David. He slipped it on and seemed proud to have his turn in the tradition. Why do I feel like I look at this picture and can suddenly see David at his eighth grade graduation, at prom, at a job interview one day? Now if we can just get him to sit still in one place for the hour and a half ceremony...
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Rainy Sunday
It was one of those rainy spring weekends when you just want to be inside with a good book. We had a little tease of good weather this spring followed but lots and lots of rain. It is making everyone a little stir crazy, cooped up with each other and ready to be outside. I guess that is what makes summer so sweet in the Midwest.
Monday, April 17, 2017
Home Sweet Home
I am someone who believes in the old saying that home is where the heart is. With the move, I have been telling the kids that home is wherever we are, all together. It helped a little bit that we read the Little House on the Prairie Books together and could talk about how many times Laura's family had moved as they pushed westward across the prairie. But still they did not want to leave.
There is something, too, about the houses you grow up in and the memories that you have of that physical place. I remember the farmhouse where I lived as a little girl. The patterns on the linoleum and the tile in the kitchen, the hippie orange and brown yarn weaving my mom had hanging on the wall and the texture of the davenport in our living room. I remember the pitch of the roof in the attic where the kid bedrooms were and the red flowers that my mom grew by the patio.
One of the hardest things about moving was that the kids were upset that we were selling the house. David engaged in some magical thinking for a while, telling himself that no one would want it and we could just keep it as our Iowa vacation house. He would get so upset about the thought of selling the house that I stopped mentioning to Joe anything about buyer showings or the like if David was around. Sometimes it was hard not to fantasize along with him.
Last weekend we went back to stay in our house and had what will be out last Easter egg hunt there. The weather was beautiful and my favorite yellow magnolia tree was in full bloom in the yard. The kids played ball in the cul-de-sac and happily ran down the street to shoot hoops with the neighbor kids. I fell in love with the house all over again, wrapped up in years of happy memories and the beauty of the green yard in spring. Not to mention how lovely it was staged with all of the clutter packed away in boxes.
After the eggs were all found and we had packed up to leave, we learned that the family who saw it on Saturday had made an offer to buy it. I am convinced it was the yellow magnolia tree they fell in love with as I had years before. And just like that, it was no longer ours. But David did want to know if the people who bought it would ever sell it again, so that he could buy it as an adult and move back in. That boy and his sweet heart get me every time. And so I want this post to be for the kids to remember our house in Iowa.
There is something, too, about the houses you grow up in and the memories that you have of that physical place. I remember the farmhouse where I lived as a little girl. The patterns on the linoleum and the tile in the kitchen, the hippie orange and brown yarn weaving my mom had hanging on the wall and the texture of the davenport in our living room. I remember the pitch of the roof in the attic where the kid bedrooms were and the red flowers that my mom grew by the patio.
One of the hardest things about moving was that the kids were upset that we were selling the house. David engaged in some magical thinking for a while, telling himself that no one would want it and we could just keep it as our Iowa vacation house. He would get so upset about the thought of selling the house that I stopped mentioning to Joe anything about buyer showings or the like if David was around. Sometimes it was hard not to fantasize along with him.
Last weekend we went back to stay in our house and had what will be out last Easter egg hunt there. The weather was beautiful and my favorite yellow magnolia tree was in full bloom in the yard. The kids played ball in the cul-de-sac and happily ran down the street to shoot hoops with the neighbor kids. I fell in love with the house all over again, wrapped up in years of happy memories and the beauty of the green yard in spring. Not to mention how lovely it was staged with all of the clutter packed away in boxes.
After the eggs were all found and we had packed up to leave, we learned that the family who saw it on Saturday had made an offer to buy it. I am convinced it was the yellow magnolia tree they fell in love with as I had years before. And just like that, it was no longer ours. But David did want to know if the people who bought it would ever sell it again, so that he could buy it as an adult and move back in. That boy and his sweet heart get me every time. And so I want this post to be for the kids to remember our house in Iowa.
The living room, where the kids would get games and puzzles out of the cabinet and leave them strewn out on that coffee table for days. The coffee table acquired a permanent ring from a mug of hot chocolate that was left there one cold winter day when we were inside and the boys had Axis and Allies all over the room. There were tons and tons of Legos assembled over the years here. I love that rug because it remind me of something you would spread out on the beach for a picnic.
The dining room where we hosted Thanksgiving, Christmas and Easter with aunts, uncles and grandparents. Lots of reminders were given in this room to not blow out the candles while we were still eating. In the dark. When we moved into this house, the movers accidentally took a huge chunk out of one of the legs on this dining room table. I was hugely bummed for weeks, thinking they had ruined the table. I tried gluing the broken piece back in with wood glue. It stuck, but the harsh yellow glue lines were clumsy and obvious. After a while, I grew to love this ugly gash in the table filled in with glue because it feels like a metaphor for marriage and for life--you make mistakes, you fix things as best you can and keep going. And the table keeps hosing our family dinners just fine.
The family room where the kids were most often watching tv, working on Legos or reading by the fire. The Christmas tree was always in the corner to the left of the fireplace. I have lots of memories of the kids running into this room on Christmas morning so excited to see what Santa had left. The redbud tree outside the window was their favorite climbing tree. Growing up on our farm, the redbud tree was a favorite climbing tree for me and my brother and sister as well, and I loved this connection to my childhood. I saw the painting over the fireplace in the window of Pier1 as I was headed into Trader Joe's on a grocery run. Something compelled me to turn around and buy it, and I still love it to this day. Buy what you love is the best decorating advice I ever have received.
The kitchen. It looked like the picture above when we moved in. And about a year later, after a month and a half without running water and loads of white paint, like this:
The place where hundreds of mostly mediocre meals and endless snacks were consumed. Lots of grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup (my specialty since law school). Somewhere along the way with kids I realized that my kids prefer to know what is coming, so we started a dinner schedule. Monday was pasta night, Tuesdays fish (usually in the form of sticks), Wednesdays chicken (usually nuggets), Thursday soup and sandwich and Friday nights we always ordered pizza for family movie night.
We had some great meals, too, usually when the grandmothers were around to help inspire me to do better in the kitchen. Iowa ham at Easter, turkeys at Thanksgiving and stuffed shells on Christmas Eve. Always bagels and lox with red onions and capers on Christmas morning for the adults. Served with mimosas and good coffee. The kids were too excited to eat anyway. Later we would make chocolate steamed puddings like my grandma used to make. Speaking of chocolate, I learned how to make double chocolate chocolate chip cookies in these ovens. The rare food that all three kids loved. And the gingerbread houses I make with the kids every year were always stored up high on the shelf over the refrigerator.
The kitchen sink, where I stood and watched Grandma Julie climb onto the roof with a broom to sweep off the satellite dish so that we could watch the Super Bowl. The kids spent hours birdwatching out the window over the sink. Woodpeckers and eastern Iowa goldfinches and lots and lots of sparrows. I spent hours doing dishes at that same window and watching the kids on the magical swingset between the pine trees and the apple trees. Your toes would touch the apples in late summer if you pumped high enough on the swing.
The office where the kids watched hours and hours of stupid cat videos after school. Fortunately or unfortunately, I hear they still have stupid cat videos in Chicago.
When we moved in, the room looked like this (for orientation, the desk in the picture above would be up against the two windows in the picture below):
The room creeped me out and I couldn't figure out why until one day I decided it felt like being in a giant coffin with all of that wood around you. Our painter suggested painting it like this, and after he was done, I felt much better.
This built in desk on the other side of the room is where Joe stored his big Costco packs of gum. The kids were adept at swiping pieces and secretly chewing them like little gum ninjas. Especially Davey, who was known for leaving gum and wrappers all over the house.
The view from the front door. It had the hallway with the highest ceilings where the kids would fly their remote controlled helicopters.
These stairs were carpeted when we bought the house. I had always wanted hardwood stairs with white risers and finally got them when had hardwood floors installed and painted the risers and spindles white. Grandma Julie and Julia always sat on these stairs on beggar's night and answered the door here for tricker or treaters while they heard the kids' jokes to get candy. I will miss that Iowa tradition.
The master bedroom, where we all piled "on the big bed" to read stories every night. One of my favorite things about being a parent is reading out loud to my kids every night. On this bed we read The Odyssey, Winnie the Pooh, George and Martha, the entire Magic Treehouse Series, all of the Laura Ingalls Wilder books, The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Pinkalicious, Lego books, Star Wars books, Elephant and Piggie books, The Guinness Book of World Records, Dr. Seuss and so many more. Did I mention more Captain Underpants than I wish to read in a lifetime? I loved turning on the fireplace on winter nights and we would all snuggle up under the down comforter and read. There were no neighbors behind us, just a creek and a ravine full of trees. I found it very peaceful to fall asleep to the owls and wake up to see the sun over the trees.
When we looked at buying this house, one of the big selling points by our realtor was that it had three bathrooms upstairs so that everyone could be spread out as they got ready. I laugh now in retrospect, because the only place my kids ever wanted to get ready was in my bathroom with me. On top of me, on top of each other and always together. My kids always used our "big tub" and our shower. All three of them fit in this tub together and spent hours hanging out here while they played with legos, played with glowing fish in the tub with the lights out, used water color paints to paint the sides of the tub on winter days when we had nothing better to do anyway. When we lived in this house, I read an interview with an actor who said she drinks her coffee in the shower and thought to myself that she was incredibly brilliant. This shower had a little ledge where I would rest my coffee so that I could drink it while I was in the shower. It's the little things in life, right?
This was the bedroom at the end of the hall. At various times it was AJ's room, Julia's room and then our guest room. When we put the house on the market, we staged it as a playroom. Joe spent an entire weekend painstakingly painting that stenciled wall for Julia one winter. It was maddening to line up the stencil correctly, and after one row, I suggested that he just forget it and paint over it rather than continuing on. I was amazed at his patience in doing it over and over again to get it to look like this. If the next family paints over it, may they never tell us. The tent in the corner was our present to Julia for her fifth birthday. It didn't get as much use as the tents we made out of blankets and chairs.
You know how you can be married to someone for ten years and think you know everything about them until bam! one day they do something totally out of character that surprises the heck out of you? That is Joe and this deck. The man loves brown everything in the home--couches, coffee tables, dining room tables--you name it, he thinks it looks good in brown and sees no need to change it. When we moved in, this deck was brown and in need of paint touch ups. Imagine my surprise when Joe came back from the paint store with the color above--Lake Blue. Go for it! I egged him on. Once we started painting, I had a moment of panic when the blue appeared to be more of the Smurf blue hue. But two coats later and I was won over. And the end result was one of my favorite home improvement projects ever.
The mudroom. One of the first things we did when we moved into this house was to have the closet in this room ripped out and replaced with lockers. The kids loved to hide in their lockers and pop out to scare each other. Outside the door is the side porch, also known as the kid porch and the rain porch. The best place to watch summer thunderstorms. I remember sitting on the front porch of our farmhouse as a kid snuggled under a blanket watching a rainstorm. Joe loves to watch the rain, too, and would often sit on this porch during a storm.
My favorite thing about the house, the yellow magnolia tree. I always requested Mother's Day pictures in front of this tree. It was flowering the week we bought the house and the week we sold it. I will miss this tree.
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