I’m in a good place. The new house is so much easier to function in
than the old house that I’m calmer in general. No one is sick (except
Aden has a cough and Quinn tells me his stomach hurts at odd times and
Mona has some bug bite on her shoulder the size of coaster, but you
know, the baseline for sick in a household of kids is different than for
normal people, so none of this counts as anyone being sick in my
book). Work is good, kids are happy, and I’m hearing from Ian a little
bit now and then and that’s always nice. I even got a letter this week
letting me know that an essay I submitted to the ‘This I Believe’ series
on NPR is being published in a collection due out in the fall. How
cool is that?
It probably sounds like I’m setting myself up for karmic disaster by
admitting to hogging too much of the good at one time, but I’m just
going to enjoy it while it lasts. Because the really nice thing about
that ‘calm and everything is under control’ feeling is that the little
things aren’t getting under my skin. When I’m pulled too many
directions and I’m anxious I tend to snap at my kids a little too
quickly, which makes me feel guilty, and then I’m just not nice to be
around.
Right now? I’m the fun mom on the block with extra kids from
the neighborhood hanging out and staying for lunch and we plan paper
mache projects and paint and bake cookies with mini M&M’s in them.
That’s so much more satisfying than being the mom who is always yelling
because we’re late for somewhere and no one listens the first ten times I
tell them to do something. It’s summer. I’m not even enforcing a
bedtime. I can’t get upset about them not following rules when there
are almost no rules to break. The big ones at the moment are: Don’t
come downstairs naked, don’t leave the yard without telling me first,
keep the back door shut (that one they are bad at), and when the
fireflies come out it’s time to come home.
There are still important codes of conduct that apply, but they don’t
feel like rules. Occasionally I have to remind someone that at our
home no one may be excluded from playing any of the games going on, but
that seldom comes up. I would clamp down on any of the kids if they
were being rude or mean or overly careless, but those times are rare.
As long as everyone is being nice things are easy.
There is one funny side effect, though. Mona craves either a little
more structure, a little more conflict, or both. I’m not sure which,
but it manifests itself in her choosing periodically to punish herself.
Aden and Quinn do that too from time to time, but with Mona it’s more
dramatic. Aden at around Quinn’s age once famously told me when she
was angry (I think the offense was we weren’t going to go someplace
because it was closed) that, “FIne! I won’t eat sugar for a whole
day!” I just looked at her and said, “Okay” which made her more angry
and she upped it to a week. Last night Quinn was so tired by the time
we got home from work that when he asked me to open a chocolate milk for
him and I pointed out I’d already done it, he was furious. He said,
“How could you do that? I didn’t ask you yet!” and he stomped off as
loudly as possible and collapsed on my bed and passed out.
But Mona is in a class by herself. She has what I think of as her
Garbo moments when she wants to be alone, and I don’t have a problem
with that, but she can’t expect to be alone in a public space. She
can’t, for instance, claim the play structure as a place to be alone, or
the TV area, or the kitchen. That’s just not fair. I will clear
people out of the music room for her, or give her my room, or even clear
kids out of the toy room for awhile if she wants it, but today she
tried to use the computer in the middle of the dining room and tell her
brother he couldn’t look on. I told her that wasn’t nice and she took
great offense and banished herself to her bedroom screaming, “Fine then I
won’t have breakfast and I don’t love you anymore.” She stomped up the
stairs (the new house offers much better opportunities for noisy stair
stomping apparently) and when she turned around at the top of the
banister to add something else I was fed up and raised my voice and told
her to be quiet and go to her room already if she couldn’t be nice to
her brother. She wailed that she hated me and moped on her floor under a
blanket. After some cooling off I went in and told her I was sorry I
yelled. She told me I should yell. I asked her if she wanted me to punish her more often and she said, “Yes.”
Poor girl is serious. The thing is, she doesn’t really do anything
bad. She does what I ask of her and volunteers to do things like crack
eggs or set the table. She’s not perfect, but she’s six. I correct her
or explain things when necessary, but other than trying to shake her
little brother off her tail once in awhile (which I get) she is a very
good kid. There isn’t much I have to tell her ‘no’ about, and maybe
that’s a problem for her. It reminds me of a quote I heard from Fred
Rogers in an interview a long time ago where he said he thought it was a
very cruel thing to do to children to never tell them no. No was a way
of outlining clear boundaries for children in a world where they needed
to feel safe. No was a way of showing them you care. Maybe I need to
take Mona to a place with broken glass and poisonous snakes so I can
clutch her close and say, “NO! Don’t touch! Keep your shoes on! No
snake petting for you!”
Could this be a deployment thing? That she has fears and
frustrations and she needs an excuse to vent about them and she can’t
find a good one lying around? Maybe having daddy away feels like a
punishment and she wants it to have a name. Or maybe she’s crazy. In
any case it doesn’t happen frequently, but when it does happen it’s
loud. After about an hour of self-imposed exile in her room she drew me
a love note on her magnadoodle and placed it outside her door for me to
find. She was all squeaks and cuddles again and she told me she loved
me. The dark cloud had passed. Don’t know when I’ll see it again, but
it’s scarier than the tornado warning we lived through the other night
so I hope not soon.
But other than those odd moments when the kids are trying to get a
rise out of me, everything else I’m able to take in stride right now.
It’s nice. I first noticed how much better I was handling the little
things lately when I had cluster of scheduling problems and it just kind
of made me laugh. The refrigerator was making a buzzy-screamy sound
one morning, and since our house came with a home warranty I called them
about it. The soonest they could get someone in was three days later
right smack during the time we had dentist appointments for all four of
us scheduled. It was painful to cancel those dentist appointments, but
we couldn’t keep living with the horrible noise in the kitchen so it had
to be done. Do you know how hard it is to get four dentist
appointments together on one day?!?! Hard enough that the new ones are
in October. I had to think about the kids’ school hours for the
reschedule for crying out loud. In the meantime we’re on a waiting list
so if people cancel and I want to sneak each of us into the dentist one
at a time over the summer we can, but ugh. Anyway, to accommodate the
refrigerator guy I also had to move an appointment at the violin store
and change my plans for grocery shopping. Fun all around.
But that’s not the best part. The best part is when the refrigerator
guy got to our house, examined our appliance for twenty seconds, and
then told me the fridge was fine, it was the doorbell box mounted above
it that was screaming. Apparently the heavy rain we’ve had here
affected the wiring on the doorbell on our side door and triggered some
kind of doorbell alarm mode. A friend was kind enough to come out and
disconnect it later in the day. A couple of months ago I would not have
found this funny. Nowadays, well, it’s just not enough to bug me. The
dentist appointment thing is annoying, but no one’s teeth are falling
out that shouldn’t be falling out, so it doesn’t really make any
difference. Life is fine.
Also, the freedom I have since Aden is around to help watch Quinn was
unexpected. I was thinking with the girls out of school for the summer
that it would be more work, but it’s turned out to be less. Aden is
old enough (and a kind enough big sister) that instead of me having to
help Quinn every time he has a computer problem or wants a piggy back
ride or needs someone to push him on the swing, Aden can do some of that
too. When we’re all at the violin store and I need to work, Aden is
wonderful about assisting both of her younger siblings with whatever
they could use help with, and it’s really nice. Quinn is crazy about
his big sister and would prefer to do things with her most of the time
anyway, and Aden thinks her little brother is adorable and doesn’t mind
having him tag along. This is also contributing to that sense of calm
I’m currently enjoying. (At least when Mona is not literally asking for
a time out.)
This is not to say I still don’t have panicky moments when I worry
about Ian in Iraq, or that there still aren’t a hundred projects I’d
like to get to, but I can’t do anything about Ian and the war so I try
not to dwell on it, and I remind myself how lucky I am that my biggest
source of frustration is that I have too many choices of great things to
do.
I did get thrown for a loop the other night when I was watching an
episode of Friday Night Lights on my computer before falling asleep,
and the last scene was of soldiers showing up at a character’s door to
inform the family that their soldier had been killed in Iraq. I was not
expecting that and wouldn’t have watched the show if there was any way
to know that was coming. I was pretty shaken up and didn’t sleep well
that night.
But those moments are few and far between right now.
Quinn’s smile always sets the morning right no matter how badly I’ve
slept. Mona makes me laugh. Aden touches my heart. How can I
complain? The little things that used to get me down are outnumbered.
I’ve got enough little things around that make me happy that right now
every day is a good day. I’m doing my best to appreciate that for all
it’s worth.
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