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You're So Complicated

Relationships are so easy when you're three.  Honestly, everything (or at some very important things) I need to know about relationships I could learn from my girls, if I'd only listen. First, always let people know what you want (or don't want).  My girls never hold back on what they want - whether it be the dreaded-by-all-adults question of "what should we have for supper" or a simple Saturday afternoon question of what should we do - they tell it like it is (or at least Pumpkin does, though Bug makes her opinions known in her own way).  Sometimes it stings a little, when for whatever reason they don't want to participate in whatever great idea I had planned for them or they just aren't in the mood for tickles or kisses, but I never wonder whether there are ulterior motives or if their actions are motivated by guilt.  There aren't and they aren't. Second, and in the same vein, always let people know how you feel.  Emotions get complicated and...

Something to Talk About

Sometimes, like this morning, I realize my conversations with Pumpkin have gotten out of control.   She is such a great conversationalist that sometimes I find I get myself in over my head with an explanation that is just a little more than a three-year old can handle.   For example, this morning I started discussing the 4 th of July with Pumpkin.   Simple enough – it was on the agenda for summer camp this week so I figured if they can talk about it so can I. It started out simple enough – America’s birthday; red, white, and blue; fireworks; parade; grilling out; cake.   Well, cake turned into a question of who was going to blow out the candles, which led to my attempted explanation of America as a country and not a person.   Despite the obscurity, Pumpkin resolved that one fairly easily – “I will blow out the candles for ‘merica.”   Okay, good enough. Then the talk turns back to cake and I start explaining how we will make a red, white, and bl...

I Took a Memory to Lunch

We have had all sorts of crazy new adventures in the Brown house since last we met; the most obvious of which is the Brown house is now in a new location!  As of Friday we are the proud owners of our dream home which we have been trying to buy since before Bug was born.  For now, we are the proud owners of that home AND the owners of our River House but in 30-days (barring anymore unforeseen realty drama) we will be back to owning only ONE home.  Other than the typical stresses associated with moving and owning two homes, life has been mostly grand.  The girls love the new house, per Pumpkin, who has declared that it doesn't "stink like the other house".  Despite her love of the new digs, she refuses to sleep at night in her own room and has taken up residence on the floor next to my bed instead.  It sounds awful to relegate your child to the floor, but I thought if I made sleeping in my room unappealing maybe she would opt back into her ...

You Say It's Your Birthday

  My dear Pumpkin,   Today is your birthday.   I have decided that one of my gifts to you each year will be to write you a letter saying all the things I want to say but don’t or can’t, or that I need to but haven’t yet.   I know this “gift” won’t mean much now, other than to myself, but I need to know you have these letters when I’m gone, whether that be next year or in 50 years.   I want you to be able to hear my voice and know how very much you were loved.   And even when it doesn’t feel like it, I want you know that I understand you.   I want you to know that you are the most amazing little girl in the world. Today you are three.   Some moments I find myself looking at you and barely recognizing the little girl standing where my tiny baby once was.   I hear words out of your mouth that are beyond profound.   I see flashes of understanding in your eyes that lets me know you get things that you are not even able to fully pr...

Call me a Joker, Call me a Fool

Certainly if the judges were out this weekend, after the failed parenting experiment that it was, I would be have been eliminated from any possiblity of Mother of the Year. With Hubby out of town and my parents headed to New Orleans to meet up with family and friends for JazzFest, I had a choice - stay home alone all weekend with the two girls or load them up and head them out to NOLA.  It wasn't really much of a choice - we were road-tripping it!  I talked myself into by reminding myself that Pumpkin is very musical, loves live music and loves to dance.  She also loves hotels.  Bug, on the other hand, is just as laid back as a Sunday morning, so there was really no reason NOT to go.  Right? The car ride there was fabulous - no major meltdowns, mostly naps, and we made half-decent time despite three pit stops in as many hours.  The hotel room was big enough that we weren't going to suffocate (which is a big PLUS in NOLA) and the weather seem...

Mother, Mother, There's too many of you crying...

As my last post may have hinted at, I've been feeling very existential about motherhood. I feel very much that being a mother is the most complicated, intense, profound and deeply rewarding experience I have ever had.  From the moment that you feel the first flutter, there truly are no words to describe the constant roller coaster of overwhelming emotion.  This is ironic since I am writing a blog about motherhood that I am always finding myself at a loss for a word big enough or powerful enough to truly capture my emotion. I am now a part of a long line of mothers near and far, old and young, who want the same exact thing for their children that I want for mine. I want their basic needs met.  I want them to experience joy, love, success, pride, and peace.  I never want them to want.  I never want them to hurt.  In whatever language, on whatever continent, we are all mothers.  We are connected by our love.  We hurt for...

Sunshine Go Away Today, Don't Feel Much Like Dancin'

There are no words. I have nothing profound or eloquent to say. A child was among the victims. What kind of world are we living in? I don't want my children to know this fear that is choking me. I used to ache for the mothers in those other places who were afraid their children would be shot when they walked outside... Those mothers who worried about roadside bombs... But that was their concern, those countries were over there.  Far away. I once only ached for them.  Now I am one of them. Bug was up sick last night.  Two long hours.  I held her the entire time. I let Pumpkin fall asleep in  my bed.  I missed her as soon as her eyes closed. I finally laid my own tear-stained cheeks on my pillow and frantically whispered fervent prayers into the cold dark night. Waking, I hoped it was all a bad dream. It wasn't. But neither was the beauty in those little girls' eyes as they peered over their warm comforters this mornin...