Friday, August 26, 2011

Requiem for a Restaurant

After two less-than-satisfactory outings on Wednesday, I’m declaring this family’s restaurant days officially on hiatus.  Wednesday at lunchtime, my sister and I headed to Original Pancake House – a long-time favorite.  Our waiter said to us, “Today all our specials have fresh peaches – waffles, pancakes, or crepes.”  When Ellen exclaimed, “I LOVE peaches,” he didn’t miss a beat.  He bent right down to her level and said, “Would you like me to bring you some peach pancakes, sweetheart?”  Ellen nodded.  “And would you like some chocolate milk to drink?”  She nodded again.  (Really, his entire pitch could not have been more tailored to Ellen).
When our food arrived (after ten minutes of trying to get Cecilia to eat something, anything), Ellen’s peach pancakes came with a humongous dollop of real whipped cream.  She stuck her finger in and licked.  “Mmm.  I LOVE whipped cream,” she said as she swiped again.  Rachel cut her pancakes into bite-sized pieces, and Ellen continued her Whipped Cream Finger Dip.  “No more finger dipping,” I said.  “Try your pancakes.  You’re supposed to eat them WITH the whipped cream.”  Ellen’s response to this request was to attack the whipped cream with her spoon instead of her finger.  While I silently gave her props for considering that the introduction of a utensil might improve her chances of being allowed to continue a whipped-cream-only course of action, I said to her, “Enough of the whipped cream.  You need to take a bite of actual pancake, or peach, or both.”  Again, she took a cream-exclusive bite.  “Okay,” I said.  “Next time I see you eating only whipped cream and no pancakes, I am going to remove that big dollop.”  She looked me straight in the eye, slowly put her spoon down, extended her pointer finger, and gave her whipped cream a little test swipe.  I grabbed my own spoon and relocated her whipped cream onto my plate.  Next came the eruption of tears and screaming “I NEED MY WHIPPED CREAM!  I NEED MY WHIPPED CREAM!”  Her whining did not stop, so I got up from my own chair, picked her up, and carried her out of the restaurant, where she continued her tantrum for another minute or two.  Then we snuggled, sang the alphabet, and went back inside, where Rachel and Cecilia both greeted us with smiles.  Rachel said to Ellen, “I will fix for you the Perfect Bite – peaches, pancake, and whipped cream – and then we can ‘cheers’ and take bites at the exact same time.”  The Perfect Bite was carefully constructed, Rachel put together her own perfect bite of strawberry crepe, and she and Ellen clinked their forks together, opened mouths wide, and stuffed them in.  “Mmmmm,” said Rachel.  “Yuck,” said Ellen, after reopening her mouth and letting her Perfect Bite fall back onto her plate without even chewing at all.  “What, you don’t like pancakes with peaches in them?” Rachel asked.  “No way,” replied Ellen.  She sat there with the pain of the world on her face for a few minutes, periodically taking little sips of chocolate milk, and sighing dramatically.  Finally I said, “Do you think you might like to try your peach pancakes with a little butter and syrup?”  She shook her head and said slowly, as though the thought was just occurring to her, “Maybe they need some whipped cream or somethin’.”   Aaaand…we’re back.  She downed a grand total of zero bites.          
So Wednesday night, Ellen had swimming lessons.  Our usual routine is to have Panera right after lessons, since it’s so conveniently located across the hall from Foss in Knollwood Mall.  But on this particular night, we trekked a little further to Applebee’s, to meet Dad and Sami for some dinner. 
This time the dining ruckus was caused by Cecilia.  She just really doesn’t care much about eating.  This is a quality that will serve her well later (ability to refuse unneeded brownie), but doesn’t serve me very well now (inability to distract with snacks).  When she wasn’t shoving away the hand that was holding her spoon, she was reaching out for me and letting loose her shriek.  (You know the shriek.  The other times you’ve heard it, it was coming from the kid in the seat behind you in the airplane, and it was so ear-splitting that it made you turn around immediately, almost involuntarily, to give the mother the stink-eye).  Taking her out of the high chair resolved the shriek, but presented a new problem – uncontrollable wiggling, which eventually necessitated restaurant bail number two for the day.  We returned to the table just in time for our waiter to arrive and ask if we’d be interested in having some dessert.  I laughed and said, “Only if the kids can go hang out in the kitchen with you while we eat it.”   He should’ve taken me up on that, because I would have left one hell of a tip.             

Saturday, August 20, 2011

Arrows and Flowers

On my right forearm is tattooed an arrow with its tip encircled by cherry blossoms.  The image is inspired by a story in a book by Buddhist nun Pema Chodron, in which she discusses the ability of mindfulness (being fully present in each moment) to transform evil/difficult/ugly things into beautiful things – in other words, to “turn arrows into flowers.”  The “turning arrows into flowers” story is one that has stuck with me, and its representation on my forearm is intended to remind me of the value of embracing whatever “the moment” can throw at me, particularly where parenting is concerned.  Admittedly this is usually way harder than it sounds (and I think it even SOUNDS hard).  There are a lot of Arrow stories – bad moments in my life as a mom – and plenty of Flower stories.    
Arrows
·         When Ellen was 2.5 and Cecilia was 6 weeks old, Dave took his close-to-annual trip backpacking with Pat and left me to fare alone.  If the post-partum depression, extreme newborn colic/incessant screaming, and slow-going adjustment to two children weren’t enough for me to deal with solo (and I assure you, they were enough), during that same time Ellen suffered a bowel obstruction which caused her to throw up in her sleep in the middle of the night, over the course of several nights.  I’ve known very few people (sober ones, anyway) who sleep through throwing up but for some reason, fast asleep is the only way I’ve seen Ellen do it, excepting the one time which also involved Cecilia’s rolling off our bed.  It’s not good.  Awake throwing up leads to immediate cleanup and therefore saves the parent from the confusion that I suffered on the morning after the first time this happened, when I found a perfectly content and clueless Ellen sitting in her bed with a mysterious dried substance in her hair and on her pillow.  I examined quizzically, touched, and sniffed before figuring it out.  Gross.
·         Since we’re on the subject, the following pregnancy Arrow counts as a parenting Arrow, since while I was dealing with the effects of Cecilia on the inside of me, I was also dealing with Ellen on the outside of me.  One morning at about six months along, I left Ellen to play in the living room while I went to take a shower and brush my teeth.  When a hard kick to the ribs caused me to inhale sharply, some toothpaste flew back into my throat.  I should’ve gotten a glass of water right then, but since I was already completely undressed, I did not go to the kitchen to retrieve a cup.  (I’ve made this mistake before, and our lack of kitchen window treatments combined with my lack of motivation for bathrobe retrieval has resulted in more than one accidental show for our very close neighbors).  No, I figured I’d be fine for a few more minutes, and I stepped in the shower.  The intense minty-ness of the ill-lodged toothpaste became more and more irritating as I lathered, rinsed, and repeated.  A coughing fit ensued.  Finally, the heightened gag-reflex of pregnancy bit me in the ass.  And so began a cycle of gagging, purging, and repeating, which lasted long enough for me to bail on hair-rinsing and step out of the shower, where I continued the purging, naked and dripping wet.  As my sister would say (sarcastically of course), “[Pregnancy] is a beautiful journey.”

·         See these sweet faces?  This was five minutes before Ellen decided she wanted to continue browsing through the greeting cards that sing when you open them, against my firm directive to sit back in the cart so we could leave.  She had a public tantrum so loud, and so great, that we bailed on our completely full cart in the middle of the store and tried to ignore the stares of everyone around us as we walked out (I guess I basically dragged her out while carrying Celie).  Of course I couldn’t remember where we parked when we got outside, so it all continued for much longer than it should have.  When we finally drove away, I started crying too.  It’s an irrefutable truth that if you have children, you will someday be “that” mom.  And then you will cry and momentarily dream of your life without children while a maniacal voice inside you says “mwah-hah-hah-hah…it’s too late…you can’t give them back…” and a maniacal voice in the back seat screams “all this cryin’ is makin’ me hungry, and I NEED fruit snacks!”     

Flowers
·         Ellen says so many things that make me laugh.  Yesterday, out of the blue, she told me that she would LOVE to be able to fly.  “Where would you fly?” I asked.  “Everywhere,” she said.  “Okay, where would you fly FIRST?” I asked.  “To the bank,” she replied.  I thought to myself, “That’s a good plan.  If you’re going to fly everywhere, you’ll need some cash.”  I said, “The bank?  Why?”  Her answer – “To get a sucker.”  And at the hospital the other day, after meeting one of Dave’s colleagues – “What an interesting doctor.  Some doctors are interesting.  Daddy’s a doctor.  But he’s not very interesting.”
·         My girls showing their love for me, which at these ages they do both willingly and often, is a great big Flower.  I love when Cecilia reaches out her arms and shrieks for me when I’m the first person she sees in the morning.  Her hugs are the best, bar none – they last forever and her head rests on my neck while both arms hang on.  A few seconds in, she’ll start doing “The Pat” – rubbing and patting my back very gently.  I’m sure “The Pat” is a genetic inheritance from my mom.  So adorable.  Ellen can show her love with words now, which is so fabulous.  One night when Dave was putting her to bed, she came out and gave a goodnight hug to Uncle Pat, then headed back to her room.  “Hey, what about me?” I said.  She turned around and said “MOM, I could NEVER forget about YOU!” as she ran over.  Lately she’s been trying to think of ways to quantify her love – “Mom, I love you as big as that building.  Mom, I love you as much as I love Thomas.  Mom, see that huge cloud?  I love you as big as that.”  And yesterday, an All-Star moment, while singing along to a Kindermusik CD – “Mom, I think you are a LOVELY singer.  You are the best singer in town.” 
·         I love how my girls love each other.  Often, while we’re driving down the road, I’ll look back and find both of them stretching their arms so they can hold hands across the middle seat.  Other times, I will see them playing together and hear Ellen saying things like, “Celie, that’s the GREEN crayon.  Watch Big Sister use it to color leaves.”  Ellen is a natural protector and teacher, and Cecilia has such a loving and trusting nature that she would follow Ellen to the end of time.        
Before I had kids, or even knew for sure that I wanted them, I would hear parents relay their own stories, so similar to these.  I would think to myself that the horror stories sounded so horrifying, and the good stories so lame, that the scale was clearly tipped to the “No Kids” side of the debate.  I mean, if a few hugs and cute comments are all you’ve got to redeem waking up to puke all over a bed, then those toddler and preschool years are just not worth living through.  But here’s the remarkable thing – when these stories are about your own children, the Arrows are the ones that seem lame and ridiculous.  And the Flower stories are so wonderful that they change your outlook on the world at large.  They are a garden.  And the scale tips over to “I Can’t Imagine This Not Being My Life.”

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Hot Town

August typically drags for me.  By now, I’ve pretty much had enough of all the summer things that I dream about from December 26th until April-ish.  When we don’t have preschool and story-time and choir and other things to keep us busy, I have to think of things for us to do which are entertaining (or at least distracting) and cheap.  (Away-from-home morning activities are at the top of the list of things that I need in order to maintain some sort of maternal Zen.  If we’re not out of the house by 9, my desperation to flee the four walls starts manifesting as extreme impatience with normal levels of Preschool-Putz.  Sometimes I explode and have to apologize later; just the other day Ellen and I had the following conversation over PB&Js: Me: Ellen, I’m sorry that I yelled this morning. I was very angry, but that wasn’t a good way to show it.  Ellen: It’s okay Mom. We can still be friends.)  Thinking of something to do every day is drudgery at this point.  I recycle things from June and July, and those things were lame the first time around.  I’m bored and ready for my life to resume.  Plus, there’s still at least four more weeks until State Fair cheese curds. 
So, I tried to get away.  I took a solo getaway while Dave was hiking in Yellowstone.  But I was lonely and sad, and coming home and getting a giant Cecilia hug (she puts her little head on my shoulder, wraps her arms around me, and doesn’t let go for a long time) was the best part. 
Now I’m trying to focus on the little moments of good stuff until September rolls around to deliver me.  Here are a few that I’ve captured.        

Ellen and Auntie Rachel being silly

Ready to create a masterpiece

Walking together

Charles James Hatten, Nephew Extraordinaire

Charlie likes his cousin

Ellen and Moddy enjoy the carousel

Celie and Auntie nap together

Little Cutie