Thursday, November 29, 2012

Overthinking it? Me? Yes. Probably.


It's been four days since I've seen this lamb in a mall window display and I can't stop thinking about it. For instance: Is that not the most disgruntled window display you've ever seen? What's the issue? Why is he so very clearly over it? Is it that overly perky bear? The obnoxious green ribbon? The hordes of shoppers passing to and fro? Who exactly created this creature? Why did they fashion upon it a perpetual pout? And then which store employee found this lamb in the place where such things are purchased and decided that it would be just perfect for their vision? And, for that matter, what exactly was that vision? More importantly, where could I get one for myself? Because outside of a fabulous conversation starter, if ever I'm having a bad day? That lamb? It's annoyed expression is telling you to get a move on and get over it already. It's clearly had worse.

I guess sometimes there are those pressing questions for which there truly are no answers.

Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Toddlers and Gratitude

Overheard tonight at bedtime:

K: Thank you God for . . .
W: Burps
K: Ok. Yes. Well, Thank you for burps and thank you for. . .
W: Cars!
K: Yes cars are very helpful to take us places.
W: Thank you for Elmo!
K: What about Mama and Abu?
W: Oh yeah! Thank you for Mama. Thank you for Abu.

Comforting to know that after burps, cars, and Elmo--- and with a touch of prodding-- we make it in our son's prayers for the things he's thankful for.

Thursday, November 22, 2012

On catering, cranberry sauce, and gratitude

The cranberry sauce is cooling for Thanksgiving dinner, the dishwasher runs in the distance. K is playing football with his friends, my son is with his grandparents in the backyard running through piles of leaves and imploring for yet another go on the swings while I defrost the turkey and tinfoil the yams and wonder how its possible to already be well into the afternoon. I had planned on making my favorite stuffing, mashing yukon potatoes with garlic and parsley and trying a new green bean casserole recipe but my family intervened pointing out how quite far along I am, how tired I would get. You're due next month K implored, please, take it easy. So we compromised by catering half the menu from our favorite bakery, and me making only my absolute favorites.

When he said next month, I felt completely surprised because why yes, I am nearing the ninth month, but when and how did that happen? When pregnant with Waleed, the days crept along painfully slow, I felt like I was trudging uphill the Sierra Nevada, but now? Time zips past me like fleeing cheetahs that I can never hope to keep sight of much less harness. K is right. In two weeks I'll be full-term. In perhaps a month's time I'll be staring into the eyes of my brand new son. While I have a little boy to wrap my arms around, somehow its been hard to wrap my mind around the fact that the being floating and prodding so gently from within will be here soon. Though in truth, he is already here and closer to me than anyone else in the world. Soon I will share him with his father, his brother, and all that love him so dearly already, but for now its us, for now he's mine alone.

If you're following via instagram you've likely already seen this picture, it's one of my favorites because it captures both what is and what is to come. Places I never thought I'd go, things I never thought I'd be. It's a reminder that despite the stresses of life and the monotony of laundry, I'm blessed. I'm thankful. Hope to hang on to this feeling in the sleepless nights to come. Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours, hope its a beautiful gratitude-filled day recharging your appreciation and contemplation for the rest of the year to come.

The three of us

Sunday, November 18, 2012

Instagram

I done got Instagram. Hoping this will help me with my 365 project next year as this year? Didn't go so well. You on? Leave your user name or please find me, I suspect it will be my next addiction!

Wednesday, November 14, 2012

On sleep, doctor visits, and silence

It's 6 o'clock in the morning and though the house is still and dark, I am awake. It is the way it is these days. As much as I want to hibernate like a bear storing up my unconscious hours like an extra padding of fat for the coming months ahead when a little one will be waking me up every few hours, I can't. I treasure my sleep. I adore my sleep. I could sing odes, sonnets, and serenade sleep-- and yet it is the very thing that eludes me these days.

Still, in some ways, the silence in this early hour, though entirely unwanted, is beautiful in its own way. I felt reminded of this yesterday at my now weekly checkups at the doctor's office when they strapped me to a heart monitor and left me to my own devices for twenty minutes. Or rather, they left me without my own devices as my kindle and my brand new iPhone were tucked away in a purse just beyond reach. I lay in the quiet fluorescent room with nothing to do but lie back and feel my son do the samba inside me.

I am so much busier now. I can't say I'm solving world peace, or racing to important business meetings, but somehow my days fill up like a balloon about to burst and as I lay in the doctor's office with nothing to distract me I realized how rare it is to have such absolute silence in my life. I lay back and soaked it in. I felt my son fling his arms and hands and wiggle his butt. Sure I've felt this all before, but even in my down moments, there is usually a TV on, a computer humming, or a book resting in my lap. Even in the down moments there is no true and complete silence like in the doctor's room where I heard just pin-silence and the pulsing heart of the child within. I had nothing to do except be fully focused in those twenty minutes and while I feel him move every day, in those twenty minutes I felt his physical presence with a different sort of intensity; it hit me as though for the first time that I'm not just whale-like and lumbering for no reason-- I'm about to be a little samba-dancer's mother. Every human being alive has a mother. I will be his.

I just finished Wild by Cheryl Strayed, her memoir of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail after her mother's death. She writes about silence and how it transforms and how it heals. How on a trail hiking thousands of miles in hundreds of days you can simply put aside all the daily distractions and focus simply on your foot falling in line behind the other. How you can just watch a bird perched on a cliff and not think with your analytical mind but simply be in the complete silence of the outdoors. How this is something we as humans are supposed to experience, and how this is something as humans in today's world we seldom do. I've read so many stories and heard so many anecdotes of the healing and meditative power of stepping into silence and simply taking one foot in front of the other and walking. Not on a treadmill, not with iPod wires dangling from one's ears or a friend to chat with and whittle away the monotony but to actually embrace the monotony, the silence, and feel it as a tangible thing. I believe in this and yet I fear silence, I fill my days with devices, reading, chatting or otherwise eluding silence but in the doctor's office I realized its power and how healing and meditative it can be.

My days of silence [and sleep] of any variety will soon be rare but as I lay in the doctor's office, as I read Strayed's book, and as I sit here now at this early morning hour, I am amazed how little silence I experience, how important it is to harness it, and a hope that despite soon becoming a mother to two, I will find small patches of silent moments because truly they matter. How else can you delve into the deepest part of who you are if you never allow a moment to let yourself sink in?

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Potty Training: Help. Please.

I need to start. I want to start. But with the promise of pee on my carpets and potential poop on pants, I'm just well, scared to start. We've started six months ago in the smallest of ways: When he wakes each morning he gets on the toilet [we bought a small lid that goes over the big one] and does his business. But while its nice to not have to clean the poopy diaper that would otherwise be, he didn't exactly sit down on his own volition. In the spirit of true potty training I bought two cotton training underpants and a baby toilet two weeks ago. The toilet is in our half bath. The underpants in a drawer. Unused. And we need to change that. Because its time to at least try. I've googled the matter and basically I've gleaned you must go commando and give it five days of misery and not leave the house and you're done. Except I can't find five consecutive days to keep him indoors and simply not leave the house. Surely there's another way? I'm scared to start but I've been scared to switch him from bottle to sippy cup and from crib to toddler bed and he's honestly handled everything with great aplomb. So it's time to try. Once I come up with excuses not to.

Imploring all mamas! Any advice on potty training? Books, links, websites, personal experience? What age did you begin? Any advice much appreciated!

Monday, November 05, 2012

Books, a matter of perspective

No disrespect to the author of Aani and the Tree Huggers, as its an award-winning book but between the lengthy narrative and clumsy drawings? Needless to say, it's not my favorite book. But Waleed? Loves it. Each evening I hide it behind favorites like One Fish Two Fish and Curious George and each morning he digs through and brings it to me to read yet again. After the tenth day in a row, I thought I'd try to figure it out.

W: Mama book!!
Me: This book again?
W: I like it!
Me: But why?
W: Mama book!
Me: Yes, I'll read it to you honey, but why do you like it?
W: Look Mama. See? Mama. Book.

And then, as he pointed to the brown girl with the long dark hair and cradled a hand to my face, I suddenly realized why he loved this book so much and well, needless to say, its now one of my favorite books.