the mathewes family

Stephen, Jocelyn, Ruth, and Lucas

 

archives: Reflections

The Good and the Bad

Ruthie is asleep in a baby sling, wrapped tightly next to my chest. It's how she sleeps best.

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@ April 3, 2008 1:28 PM



Phases (In and Out)

After a few weeks of what felt like blissful happy social engagement, Ruu seems to have reverted to her prior stage of avoiding eye contact (while eagerly looking at every interesting thing in sight), smiling less, sleeping more erratically, and being generally more cranky.

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@ April 18, 2008 10:10 PM



It's a Long Road

eat the camera So I'm slowly but surely working on training Ruu (or Roux, as my french-loving friend Emily likes to spell it) to actually take naps. It makes her a much happier baby overall, although it can sometimes take as much as 20 minutes for her to give in to sleep. I don't let her scream and wail the whole time, of course... I set a timer for five minutes so that I *make* myself give her the chance to settle down on her own. If she's not settled after five minutes, I go in, check her diaper, see if her swaddling has come undone, pat her, comfort her as needed, and start the process again.

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@ April 24, 2008 7:36 AM



The Paschal Weekend

This year was our first year toting a kid to church for the whirlwind that is Orthodox Easter, or Pascha. Holy Week was daunting; services every night from 7pm on, and activities during the day in preparation for Pascha that kept us running around crazy!

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@ May 1, 2008 4:19 PM



A Tough One

The past few days have been a bit of a strain. Ruthie only wakes up once (around 2 AM) for her nightly feeding, and so logically (or so I tell myself), I should be on the gravy train. Yet in the back of my mind mumbles the suspicion that she's drinking more at each feeding, and therefore taking a lot more of my energy. The reason? I'm inexplicably hungry ALL THE TIME (I've already had three full meals today, as of 4 PM), and RIDICULOUSLY TIRED (though I'm getting fairly decent stretches of sleep at night).

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@ May 21, 2008 8:08 PM



a few thoughts on Ruu

It's gotten to the point where I'm not sure what constitutes Ruth News anymore, since everything she does FASCINATES me. All I know for absolute certainty is this: I love my daughter, deeply and completely.

There's really nothing like this romance and intimacy. Like marriage, it's a unique bond formed by hormones, time, will, and emotions. There is so much touch, so many hours, and so much effort put into the relationship that I can't help myself: I'll jump in front of a train for her.

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@ May 28, 2008 4:10 PM



The Ruth Report

It's been quite awhile since I've written about Ruth, so here I go!

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@ July 10, 2008 9:19 PM



There and Back Again

munch

Tomorrow, I start teaching photography at Park Camps. It's a day camp, and the session I teach will last for three weeks. While I'm teaching, I have to leave Ruth behind.

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@ July 13, 2008 4:26 PM



We have TOOTH

Ladies and gentlemen, we have a TOOTH.

Last night I felt it--a tiny scratchy sharp thing on her bottom jaw.

Today we saw it--the tiny peek of white!

TEETH = TRIUMPH!

@ July 15, 2008 3:23 PM



Houston, we have crawling

crawling

Ladies and gentlemen, the craziness has begun.

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@ July 31, 2008 12:38 PM



Settled In

crawling

The last few weeks, in spite of Ruth's amazing strides in destructivity, I feel at home in parenthood. Yes, it can be restrictive on one's social life and sleeping habits. Yes, sometimes I long for adult conversation. Yes, sometimes I wallow in frustration and misery at my own unfulfilled desires and needs (sometimes as basic as a trip to the bathroom).

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@ August 9, 2008 9:41 PM



Houston, we have standing

When she gets up in the morning, she can now peek over the edge of the playpen and make noise until we notice her. It's wicked cute.

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@ August 15, 2008 7:59 AM



Be Kind

Awhile back, Kristin Putchinsky (also known as ellen cherry), who I met while teaching at Park Camps, was telling me that she thinks the most important thing to teach kids is not to be smart, or to change the world, but to be kind.

I couldn't agree with her more. I don't care if my little girl gets a degree from Harvard and starts a foundation for some grand cause that's guaranteed to tug at people's heart strings and solve world hunger. If she's a nasty person, it's not going to mean much in the end. If, in everything she's done, she's steamrolled over others and ignored their needs for her own agenda, I will be a very sad mother.

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@ August 30, 2008 9:56 PM



Ruthie News Reel

Today's pediatrician stats: 16lbs. 10oz / 26.5"

smile over the shoulder

She got a flu shot, the first of two (yes, I vaccinate). And soon--too soon--she'll be an entire year old!

I already miss her early babyhood. While waiting in the pediatrician's office, Steve played a few videos for me on his cell phone--videos from before she could roll over and crawl. She laughed and screeched and made long whining noises. Perpetual motion. The tornado of activity that she is now has been in place since her birth. It's like she never stops to take a breath.

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@ October 1, 2008 9:05 PM



Eleven Months Today

In the last month, I haven't been so great about updating the family and all about Ruth's progress. Let me just say that it has been astounding.

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@ November 7, 2008 9:43 AM



State of the Ruthie Address

daredevil

More teeth are in the works. New techniques are developing for fighting naps and sleep. Words are beginning to form. Feedings are getting easy, if messy, since Ruth often insists on feeding herself. The appetite is growing, and she is always in need of an audience.

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@ January 10, 2009 4:14 PM



Sleep: On-Again, Off-Again

What a difference a good night's sleep makes.

The biggest drama of our lives in the past year has always been sleep. Getting Ruth to sleep through the night, at its various stages, has had its triumphs and setbacks. Now that she's 13 months old, it's reaching a tenuous place; right between genuine psychological need, and the beginning stages of--dare I say it--brattyness.

Nights in which I wake up once (due to pregnancy thirst), or twice (just listening to a whimper or two) are still common. Sometimes, however, we are plagued with nights of crying, crying, and crying. We're still out on the futon in the living room most nights; it seems as though Ruth has a sixth sense for when we're in the bedroom (which is when she can persist in getting us up).

It feels cruel to leave her there. Her frantic voice still breaks my heart. But what I think I've learned is my waffling & heartsickness have probably made things more confusing and complicated for her. It's hard to push my conflicted feelings away and be consistent.

Regardless, there is a light at the end of the tunnel. As Meg counseled me last night, she won't be 13 and still waking up at night.

The coming year will be a challenge; I imagine that in the first three months after #2 comes along, I'll feel even more a zombie than I did after Ruth arrived. But at least I'm experienced at it. All I've got to do is put a few folks on speed dial for those days when I'm barely human and losing it.

Maybe I'll publish a book after all my children are grown. I'll call it Adventures in Sleep: One Bleary-Eyed Mom's Epic Story.

@ January 13, 2009 10:48 AM



Ruth, Tidal Wave

When it comes to how tidy the house is, I'm definitely a lot more laid back now than I was about six months ago.

That's not saying much, though.

Living in a one-bedroom apartment means that if anything is out of place, it is an intrusion. Anything unnecessary, unused, or uncared for sticks out like a sore thumb. When things aren't put away, I feel as though a parallel messy universe exists in my brain; things must be tidy in order for me to think straight!

However, I'm slowly but surely creating a mental filter for toys. Ruth's toys, I tell myself, are not my mess, because they are generated by her business. Ruth's business is that of play and discovery, and my businesses is that of photography, and running the home. They both generate different sorts of messes: mine on my hard drive and in the kitchen, hers, well, nearly everywhere else.

So each morning, Ruth's business creates a minefield all around the apartment (except the kitchen and bathroom, which I quarantine with baby gates and feel should be treated as Different Adult Spaces in which Necessary Vital Things must occur and so Children's Messes Should Not Be In There. The bedroom? Trashed. The living room? Destroyed.

Every night, after Ruth goes to bed, I gather up all the toys, and put them all into a large laundry basket I have in the living room. I barely bother to sort them nowadays, reserving that as a once-in-awhile kind of activity. It usually happens when I realize that Ruth can't put her puzzles together because all the pieces have sunk back to the bottom of the basket where she can't reach.

Cute Ikea toy organizers where things are labeled? Please, I'm saving that for grade school when she can actually read or recognize a picture label.

It is nice to think that in less than a decade, I will be able to communicate to my child that it is important to clean up after one's self. We'll see how that goes.

@ January 17, 2009 9:10 AM



Starting to Creep Me Out

That must be a weird subject line for y'all to see, but here's why...

This morning, while playing with crayons and paper in the living room, Ruth got a paper cut on her toe. It bled pretty badly (though she didn't care), so I ran to get some antibacterial ointment, a cotton swab, a band-aid and a pair of socks (so the band-aid would stay on her toe). As I wrestled with her to get the band-aid on and all, she picked up the cotton swab, and proceeded to try to stick it in her ear.

She must have figured out that we use those safety cotton swabs for her ears in the bath, and so that's what they're for! Of course, she has no idea that sticking them in her ear is a bad idea, so no cotton swabs for her anywhere anytime ever!

Is a 14-month old supposed to know all this, or am I legitimately astounded?

Also, we've taken the knobs off the stove, since she can reach and turn them now. I'm in the habit of getting one out of the drawer, turning on the burner, then taking it off again and setting it on the counter so Ruth can't fiddle with the stovetop. Yesterday I knocked one over on the floor, and Ruth proceeded to pick it up and try to put it back on the stove so she could turn it. Luckily she's not coordinated enough to actually get the knob back on.

This girl is dangerous!

@ February 6, 2009 8:44 AM



Sickie Sickie

Ruth freaked me out yesterday--a high fever, lethargy, rapid breathing... needless to say I made an emergency visit to the pediatrician, who told me to give her ibuprofen and keep an eye on her, calling should complications arise. She perked up in the evening, which put me at ease. Then, she woke in the middle of the night burning up and crying hysterically, which brought me back down into Worry Town.

Today, she's been consistently clingy, moody, whiny, tired, fussy, all that wonderful stuff. She eats, but in a limited amount, and drinks well. I think she'll be on the mend tomorrow, but I'm not sure my sanity can stand another day of velcro baby. I've gotten as near to zero things accomplished as ever, and I have clients waiting for me. Of course, I can't really hire a babysitter for a sick child; why would I want the babysitter to spread germs to all the other kids?

I'm hanging in there; it's nice that Steve comes home and immediately knows I've had a long day. I just wish that Ruth were okay with giving me a break. The sicker she is, the more mommy-centric she gets, which eats at Steve's morale and exhausts me, of course.

But those back rubs sure do help.

@ February 18, 2009 6:10 PM



Piano Pals

Ruth and Julia like to play together. Ruth is just 5 months older than Julia, which makes the age difference about the same as me and my favorite cousin, Heidi (sorry, every other cousin I have). You can't beat two babies playing together, especially if it involves a piano.

collaborators

collaborators

beautiful music

Ruth in particular likes to rock out, which excites Julia.

hee hee hee

They're a bunch of monkeys!

@ March 9, 2009 5:48 PM



Of Cowgirl Boots and Favorite Foods

Ruth: it's hard to know where to start.

Ruth in April

The little munchkin is growing rapidly (don't they always?). She's still small for her age, according to those doctor's charts, but boy, is she strong and coordinated. She walks and runs with assurance, and even attempts a jump or two. She's brave, but a little on the shy side, preferring to observe kids at a safe distance before making friends.

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@ May 22, 2009 7:00 AM



Things I'll Miss / Things I'll Like

I'll be honest: I'm not looking forward to moving. I dislike that feeling of displacement and alienation. I miss old friends terribly, and often find that making new friends is a bit of a struggle, out of worries that finding new friends will somehow make me disloyal, or be a dishonor to my old friendships. I don't like living out of boxes. There's plenty of things to mourn, but I'm also trying to look at the positives of moving somewhere new, too.

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@ May 29, 2009 7:00 AM



One, two, three, four, FIVE!

Today, Stephen and I have been married for five years.

Where did the time go?

Steve and I met in college, which means I've known him for nine years. Nine years of jokes, road trips, milestones, and various date nights. You'd think I'd know the guy by now, but we still have those weird moments where we look at each other, completely surprised.

Boy, how things change rapidly in the midst of the marital odyssey, too. I've already had two jobs, and am now running my own business. I have 1.5 children (well, technically two, but decimals are fun). We're going to seminary in the fall. It's weird to feel as though the last five years have been packed with more than the eight I spent in high school and college.

Happy Fifth, Sweetheart. May the next five be as beautiful as the last.

@ June 5, 2009 7:00 AM



And Then There Were Two

Lucas at one week

I'm officially a mom of two. I'm outnumbered when alone. There's one for each of us when Steve is by my side.

I'm also the parent of a willful toddler (but what toddler isn't willful, really?).

Lucas is--to be horribly cliche--his own person. He's not at all what I remember Ruthie being like. She clung to me like a burr to a wool sweater. She needed me to co-sleep and nurse her to dreamland every night. She woke me every two hours for the first three months of her life.

In the past two nights (I'll say it though I don't want to jinx it), Lucas has let me sleep for 5 hour chunks of time. FIVE HOURS, I tell you. And he readily sleeps by himself in the baby swing. It's utterly astounding.

He's a hungry kid; during the day he'll nurse every 2-3 hours. Every now and again cry to be held. Since he's a boy, I've had to look out for the pee fountain at diaper changes. Boy, does he like to fill his pants, too.

He's a big kid; nearly two pounds larger than Ruth at birth (5lbs 12oz vs. 7lbs 8oz), and just a few days ago weighed in at 8lbs 3oz--already gaining weight in the first week.

We gave him his first bath yesterday. He is one week old.

...

Ruth seems okay with him being around. She's fascinated. She won't leave him alone. She likes to put toys and extra binkies in his swing with him. She likes to shake the swing to rock him (which we discourage, of course), and tries to sit in the swing like he does when he's not there (which we also discourage, since she'll break it). She asks to hold him. She tries to pick him up herself.

But she's also started throwing tantrums, and had a few tough nights going to bed. She's a good girl, very obedient, and normally a dream at bedtime and naptime. We've had consistency, living at Steve's parents' house. In about a week we'll throw all that consistency out the window and fly to Boston. Hopefully she won't be too disoriented.

She's going to really miss her grandparents, Papa and Mamou. I'm going to miss them, too, because watching her play and engage with them is one of my favorite things to do.

...

Soon, I'll write his birth story, as well as a general reflection on all the crazy stuff that's happened to us since July.

P.S. See more photos of Lucas here.

@ September 4, 2009 9:01 PM



Lucas' Birth Story

Lucas Mathewes arrived, scheduled but suddenly, on August 27th at 1:52 PM. 7lbs, 8oz, and 22 inches long. A hefty, healthy boy, with a full head of dark hair, and dark navy eyes.

Late pregnancy tired me out; I had been uncomfortable for weeks. Between trips to the bathroom and kicks to the ribs, I was up at all hours. A few days prior to my due date (the 22nd), I had a rough night of contractions that had me thinking, "This is it!" Steve timed them--they were strong.

Well, it was a total fakeout. The next day, the doctor checked me; 4cm dilated. "How are we not having this baby?" Steve kept asking me. I'd shrug, and keep drinking raspberry tea and going on long walks to try to get labor started.

The next week, I was almost 5cm dilated. When the doctor said she'd be happy to break my water, I was surprised when Steve and I looked at each other, and said, "Yes." Lucas was already big (I could tell), and since labor tends to go more quickly the second time around, we didn't want to end up having a kid in the backseat of a car. The doctor scheduled us for August 27th.

Thursday the 27th came. Our bags had been packed and prepared for the hospital for weeks now; we were ready. Frederica (Mamou), Stephen and I got up early and drove to the hospital. Aunt Megan and Fr. Gregory (Papa) watched Ruthie, and waited for news.

At the hospital, all our waiting was compounded and exacerbated by paperwork and procedures--very anti-climactic. I was itching to get going. I paced in my gown and socks. Steve seemed to twitch, and I felt badly that Frederica had gotten up so early to be with us and there wasn't much going on.

But then the doctor came in. I was nervous, and unsure of what to expect. I knew that once my water broke, it could mean complications. It meant I wasn't going to leave the hospital for awhile. It meant that, one way or another, I would have a baby boy in my arms at last.

And I did--I held him that afternoon. The doctor broke my water at 10:30, and let me walk the hallways. Each contraction was markedly more intense than the last. After an hour or so of walking and leaning on Steve, trying to hold conversation between contractions with Frederica, I gave up and got onto the bed. I lay down, I tossed, I hung over the edge. The pain was so much more intense than what I remembered; upon reflection it was a blessing to have had Ruth in the middle of the night, and have sleep-deprivation and passing out to dull the experience a bit.

I was wide awake, wildly aware. "I wanna die," I said. "I don't know if I can do it," I said. The doctor checked me--7cm dilated. "REALLY?" I said, astonished. In a flash, I thought, "I could ask for the drugs," but then the moment was gone in a sea of even more intense contractions and downward motion. In mere minutes, it felt, I was ready to push.

And push I did. For a half hour, I pushed. I strained. I struggled to feel the right muscles and make use of each contraction. I was losing steam and feeling defeated. Frederica and Stephen held my hands, encouraging me, helping me to breathe, making me try anew. The sooner I got this baby out, the sooner everything would be over and I'd feel that relief and happiness of The End of something that is also A Beginning.

That was Lucas' beginning. He arrived at 1:52, squalling. "He's here?" I said, with disbelief. I could still feel the contractions of afterbirth and felt twinges from a 3rd degree tear, but enjoyed the heavenly falling-in-love moments with him on my chest in the midst of the pain. I smiled, I relaxed. I looked at Steve and Frederica and my newborn son, freshly arrived. It was done.

Big sister visited the next day; disoriented and curious, Ruth looked wide-eyed around the room at the strange furniture. Thrilled to see me, she leaped into my arms and gave me a big hug. Then, she noticed Mamou holding Lucas, and started pointing out all his features--eyes, nose, ears--with an excited squeak.

And here we are now, a family of four. A new personality creates a new dynamic for us to learn and enjoy. I'm sure we'll have our share of frustration from time to time, but meanwhile the new addition to the family has made quite a splash.

Welcome, Lucas Alexander. You are loved!

@ September 6, 2009 2:45 PM



Nervous Anticipation

I leave for Baltimore today.

It's going to be strange, returning to the home-that-is-no-longer-my-home. I'm nervous, mostly about leaving my kids for so very long. I won't see Ruth until we meet in Austin, and Lucas will be away from me for large stretches of the days ahead. I know it's partly my control-freak tendencies, but also the part of me that wants to cling to something secure and familiar.

People do this all the time, I keep telling myself.

It's still strange to be caught between worlds. Hopping across the country as though the boundaries and miles didn't matter is simultaneously reassuring and disconcerting.

But before I embark on my journey, I wanted to share a few highlights. First, Stephen singing at St. George's in Norwood, MA, with a crowd of other seminarians. Ruth shared books with Lucia, a fellow toddler.

Secondly, an example of Ruth miming what mommy does with a phone and a baby.

And last, an unsuspecting victim.

@ October 9, 2009 2:18 AM



Home, home, home

I'm back from Texas, and have been for awhile now. I had the strange feeling upon returning home, that I wasn't truly "home," but merely on another leg of my travels. It's taken a week or so of normal life--laundry, dishes, diapers--to shake that feeling, and find contentment in being settled until we visit Baltimore for Christmas.

We're settled, but not completely. I have mounting anxieties about our finances, about employment, about the loose strings that moving has created. I won't go into the complicated details, but applying for food stamps and state health benefits has turned into a game of setting up dominoes in just the right positions so that one falls right after another. It feels as though there are 27 steps for each document I need to prove that we are who we say we are, live where we say we live, and need what we say we need.

Experiencing a New England autumn again has made up for this, however. Crisp air and that familiar temperate forest smell evoke powerful childhood memories for me. I'm remembering what it means to layer clothing, and discovering that my wardrobe is sorely lacking in chilly New England essentials. I curse Baltimore for making me a weather wuss.

The kids are very healthy (at the moment), and lucky for us, the dreaded H1N1 vaccine shortage won't hit home; Ruth has had her first dose, while Steve and I will get ours this week. It's nice to have a toddler whose nose I don't need to wipe every ten minutes, and a baby breathing easy and phlegm-free.

Thanksgiving is nigh upon us; Steve's parents will be up for a visit to get their hit of Ruthie's energy and Lucas' baby smiles. Both my brothers will return to Natick, and we will gather around the table like old times, and perhaps even say the family grace with gusto:

God is great, God is good
and we thank him for our food.
By his hands we are fed
we thank him for our daily bread.
Rub-a-dub-dub, thanks for the grub!
Yay, God!

(Mom always tried to make us drop that last bit.)

...

(See my October family photos, too!)

@ November 2, 2009 1:41 PM



The scar

Lucas nestled in my arms this afternoon, nursing quietly in between fits of talkativeness and enthusiastic whapping of various toys. I held his left arm--thick and padded--in my hand. I thought about the miniature skeleton underneath it, so delicate and sturdy at the same time.

Then, I noticed it--his scar.

A few weeks ago, we discovered that Lucas was strong enough to open the oven door entirely on his own. We learned it the hard way. Yes, he cried, but not nearly as much as his injury warranted. An ugly scab formed in a loose crescent shape on his left forearm. As with many childhood injuries, it dissipated quickly, almost miraculously.

The skin is now pink and smooth in a plastic way, as though someone taped the scar on to his soft, delicate baby skin. I'm sure it will fade easily over time. I may grow to miss the scar, even, because it symbolizes my boy's strength and curiosity.

I hope he's learned his lesson about ovens, though.

@ August 31, 2010 9:38 PM



Musings before bed

I'm singing Ruth to bed. I've been doing that ever since she was born. She's an anxious girl, nervous about going to sleep on her own. I don't blame her. She's always been small for her age, and I'd like to think that made her feisty.

The sound of my voice stops her from talking. It helps her calm down enough to close her eyes. Lately, because she's scared to lie down, I tell her that when I sing, she can lie down, because it makes "all the bad stuff go away."

Wouldn't it be great if I really had that magical power, eh?

Lucas, however, must be held and cuddled to bed. I don't think the singing matters as much for him. For him, it's all about touch and closeness; knowing you're near through the electricity of contact.

Lucas goes to bed much more easily than Ruth now, but he's a lighter sleeper. Go figure. I can sit next to Ruth and yell her name, and she won't budge.

What a pair.

@ September 1, 2010 8:23 PM



Home again, home again

We're home. We're unpacked. It took almost a whole week, but we did it.

What I'm most excited about is this: in the process of packing and unpacking, I managed to get rid of an astounding amount of stuff. Old posters, items we hadn't used in years, and useless junk that we somehow held on to thinking it was really meaningful made its way to the trash. Interesting books, my framed artwork, kids' clothes, and other useful do-dads went to friends, family, or the thrift store.

I feel so much lighter now, and that when we move out of seminary, our moving van will be able to accommodate everything with room to spare. Having just what we need (and maybe a little more) is exactly the way I like to feel.

This is new to me; I used to think I was a collector. I collected books, sea shells, random interesting junk that struck my fancy. After reading Your Money or Your Life, my habits towards my belongings came under fire--what was I doing with all these random collections taking up space? I didn't cherish them; they irked me. I felt obligated to keep them for--well, I couldn't figure out the reason, really.

And so I got rid of a bunch of them. And now I feel better. I'm going to keep up the de-cluttering habit on a weekly basis from now on; it will keep me excited and mentally liberated to take great care for the items I genuinely value and enjoy.

@ September 12, 2010 8:02 PM



first day of preschool!

Ruth had her first day of preschool yesterday. The dropoff went rather smoothly. Contrary to stories I had heard about other mothers, I didn't get emotional when I dropped her off. Rather, I found myself waxing sentimental when I saw Steve pull up to our parking space, and pull a sleepy toddler out of the car. She's my big girl now, I thought.

It's a large change in the life of a parent when your child starts having experiences without you around. Of course, that's what growing up entails--more independence. To me, it's frightening and exhilarating to think of all the things that my children will do, say, explore, and more, without me. They're vulnerable, but you have to let go in order to let them learn, and to let your heart stretch a little bit too.

In a way, it's a good thing that human dependence lasts for comparatively long; I don't think parents are built for a mere six week infant-to-adolescent transition, like a kitten. However much we long for our kids to think for themselves, we're just as enthralled with their neediness as they are with us.

None of these thoughts are new, of course. There's nothing new under the sun. But she's my first, and so with her, so much of life is new, like the first sounds of birds in the morning. The changes she goes through are like whiffs of seasons in the air. Tonight I dressed her brother in a red sleeper she wore a year ago. Has it been that long?

@ September 15, 2010 8:42 PM



quite a whirlwind autumn

It became very windy outside today. Georgia, my neighbor, remarked on how fast the clouds had been moving all day. The clouds at all levels were speeding by, as if to whisk us into winter more quickly than we'd like. And that's what they've been doing. After an exceptionally balmy day, I can feel the chill creeping in from my still-cracked-open windows. I don't want to shut them--I love the fresh air--but soon it will come time for us to shut up the house in the evenings completely, and hide under our down blanket for warmth. And although you can get cabin fever, there's plenty of warmth to be had indoors--warmth of all kinds.
@ October 28, 2010 9:32 PM



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