The measure of a day

We’re back to walking the dogs three times a day, which gives us the opportunity to soak up the new-morning sun, to bid the neighborhood goodnight, and to wander these cul-de-sacs all afternoon long. Yesterday we were out for an hour, never further than a couple of blocks away from home. We investigated squirrel nests, corralled our hounds when other dogs walked by, tested a dozen different ways to hula-hoop. Anna built a fairy village of sticks and leaves and grasses, with acorns for fairies and seed pods for boats and little beds made out of moss. She narrated an elaborate tale of a fairy mommy and her fairy babies, of unseen monsters chased away with magic and storms roaring outside the fairies’ cozy hole. She leapt and twirled and recited, as the dogs curled in the neighbor’s grass and snoozed.

It was, by any measure, a lovely afternoon. And we get to do this every day.

So I wish I knew why, then, I couldn’t sleep last night for fretting over all I hadn’t done. The neglected second job, the thank-you cards still piled on the counter. None of this should matter.

Hemmed in by chores, finances and the uncertainty of our future, we have every right to essentialize, to tuck in and make the most of that rare commodity we actually have at the moment: time. Time to play. Time to dance. Time to sing and to talk and to make it up as we go. Time to enjoy.

And yet I fretted because I wasn’t cooking from scratch. I thought about the unfolded laundry. I wondered if she’d remember this afternoon, long into her life, when she could have been … learning Spanish, I suppose, or soccer or t-ball or swimming.

I nearly ruined it, this happy memory, and that’s such a shame. How many of us do that? Every day? I do. I do. I do.

It’s so difficult for me to evaluate a day by what went right, and so natural to look for what went wrong. It’s just the two of us and the dogs.

Our shepherd, Tuco, assumes the role of deputy pack leader, patrolling, guarding, keeping us safe. He takes this so seriously that it’s almost comical, but I can’t laugh at him; he’s working so hard. (Of course, should I ever cry or get upset at anything in the house, he slinks into the shower. This does challenge his tough-dog image.) Rosa, the female dog, never quite lets me parent alone; she’s always on hand to help manage the puppy.

Who is managing quite well, thank you very much. When Allan is away, she sleeps in my bed and brushes her teeth in my sink and bathes in my tub. Much of this is sheer practicality; it takes half the time to supervise her if she’s right with me. But I like it, too, if I’m truthful, having her cozy-close, sharing a bath, singing while we dress.

We have as much of that as we want, these few days. What a treasure it is, this thing we have, so precious and so fleeting. I know this, really I do, and I won’t forget.

Published in: on January 27, 2012 at 10:23 PM  Leave a Comment  
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…and this is why

Me: Please check to make sure you have everything. Look all around your seat…

Anna: And in the seat pocket in front of me.

Have I mentioned that Anna’s flown across the country 15 times in four years? That instead of a “sleepover at Grandma’s” bag she’s got a favorite carry-on? She knows what shoes to wear to get through the security line quickly, how to use those plastic tray things you have to wrestle through the X-ray machine, and exactly what the flight attendants will offer her for a snack (she prefers pretzels and apple juice, no ice, please). That the San Diego Crown Room ladies know her by name?

Yeah. I’m so glad that’s over. I won’t mind if we don’t get on another airplane ever, ever, ever.

Published in: on October 2, 2011 at 1:16 PM  Leave a Comment  

Pedicures for preschoolers? Or even pre-teens?

Yesterday, Anna and I walked by a salon full of preschoolers getting mani-pedis. She asked for one. I said no.

There’s just something uncomfortable about a grown woman kneeling at the feet of a little girl, buffing and polishing. It just doesn’t feel right.

Am I making too much of this? Or is this just the sort of ‘small’ thing that can actually mean a lot in this day and age, when little girls and grown women sometimes seem to forget who is who?

I’ve painted Anna’s nails for her at home.  Her requests for polish seem to go along with her forays into my shoe closet and make-up bag, something she asks to do about once a month. It’s a controlled experiment: I only let her use the palest pink polish, and the only people applying it are me and her babysitter.

It is something about looking like me: my toes are always painted red. It doesn’t have anything to do with princesses. Her idea of royalty  is still pretty basic, shaped by the princesses she knows. Princesses, for example, wear dresses and crowns. They marry princes. They are good and kind. All of this is damaging in its own way, of course; it just doesn’t include make-up or nail polish. Yet.

Help me work this one out. What would you do?

Published in: on July 5, 2011 at 6:02 AM  Comments (5)  
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I hate lasts…

Anna on her last day of preschool

…and I’m not too fond of firsts.

Can’t we just hang out here in the middle for a while?

Published in: on June 16, 2011 at 8:15 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Life with a kid but without TV

…is possible. Surprisingly easy, even.

What is surprising is what it hasn’t done. My initial hope for this experiment was that Anna would immediately forget TV exists. But I still hear “Can I watch a movie, pleeeeeeeeeeease?” several times a week. It’s almost a reflex reaction — a flinch, as it were — to downtime.

It passes quickly, though, which doesn’t happen when we’re at my mom’s or a hotel or anywhere with a television in the corner.

It also hasn’t rendered her an apathetic consumer. Right now, I’m surprised that I was ever surprised by that. Exposure to anything, anywhere, fosters the ‘gimmes’ in our saturated, every-surface-a-billboard culture. She well knows how to ask for princess stuff by name but from there she gets less confident – she knows who SpongeBob is, I think, and probably Dora, but none of the supporting castmembers — and trust me, she isn’t a bit bothered by that (yet).

If I were to capture the no-TV life in one word, that word would be purposeful. We tried limiting our watching with basic cable on our sole TV and we wholeheartedly failed at moderation; limited to Hulu and Netflix and a laptop, we’re much better. There are still four or five TV shows that I watch regularly, and we’ll here and there devote a Friday night to a season of Weeds or Big Love on DVD.

To catch anything there must be some planning, even if it’s just remembering how long an episode is available on Hulu. We can’t TiVo. We don’t see live streaming news anymore, the kind that drones 24 hours a day from cable news stations. If it doesn’t come through the internet — and quite a few TV shows and news events don’t — then we don’t see it. We no longer watch stuff like the Oscars or Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade; maybe we could find them on the Internet, but it isn’t worth the effort.

We don’t read the newspaper more, though, and I would have predicted we would. We don’t even subscribe to the newspaper, and we’re old.

Allan and I were born during a time when the TV was the focal point of most people’s living rooms, and we came of age with 24-hour cable. We are not immune to the power of the TV; in fact we may need to do this because of its power. Especially right now, as parents of a little one (read: we spend most evenings on our own couch), we know we’d be watching Jerry Springer in no time. I am more than a little glad to not have to worry about what she might happen to see as we surf channels.

At last, the reflex to reach for the remote control has all but disappeared for all of us. I know it’s merely latent, not fully gone, because as soon as we arrive at my parents’ it roars back, and the temptation lasts long after we’ve returned home.

The biggest change, though, isn’t in what we don’t do anymore but in what we DO do. No longer does boredom = channel surfing; we’re primed now to look for something to read, to make, to play. I’ve noticed that Anna can play by herself for much longer stretches (some of which admittedly has to do with age) and for whatever reason is developing an amazing imagination. She asks to watch a movie, I say no, she’s off and running. Same thing day after day after day.

I’ll take it.

Published in: on April 6, 2011 at 5:25 PM  Comments (1)  
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Things you really shouldn’t talk about on the internet…

… but I will anyway. Here’s my first question:

How much nudity do you allow your kids to enjoy?

And I say  enjoy with intent. My daughter relishes being naked. It seems she doesn’t distinguish between stages of dress; whether she’s bundled or bare-bottomed, as long as she’s warm enough she’s happy.

All this has made “what we do inside our house” and “what we do outside our house” a completely fabricated distinction when it comes to clothing. Especially because we live in a truly inside-outside house — there are French doors from her bedroom onto the back yard and we have a privacy fence; on warm days, which are many, she runs in and out in all states.

And as it falls to me to get her ready to live somewhere other than here and to be something other than a little kid, once again I’m asking the question: what am I teaching her and how might this play out? I’m thrilled that she’s comfortable in her body and I want to hang onto that; I’m also keenly aware that she’s four, of course, and it’s time for more boundaries.

But even as she grows up and moves out into the world, her life at home and at school still looks much the same. At her school the boys and girls still share a bathroom, and there isn’t a door in sight; I don’t think she’s yet learned to close our bathroom door, either, so occasionally her playdates squawk  that Anna’s showing her naughty bits again and then look to me in terror that I’ll make them do the same.

So I gather I’m comparatively loose-reined here. But I don’t know. So I ask you: how’s it work in your house?

Published in: on April 4, 2011 at 9:17 AM  Leave a Comment  
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How not to take your kid to the doctor

1. Assume she has a cold because she has green stuff coming out of her nose.
2. Assume she has a bad cold because she says her throat hurts.
3. Assume she is throwing up because “kids throw up when they’re sick.”
4. Assume that one night of 103-degree fever was a one-off because the call-in nurse said kids get high fevers and to give her tylenol instead of ibuprofen and when you did this her fever broke.
5. Assume that she is all better because she hops around the house the next morning, giggling maniacally at, you assume, her return to extreme good health.
6. Assume her fever is back the next night because she ran around too much celebrating her return to extreme good health.
7. Assume she’s sleeping more and eating less because she’s getting over being sick.
8. Assume the patches of dry skin are because of all the baths you’ve given her because they felt good to her which, you assume, was because she felt feverish.
9. Assume that when she wakes up on Sunday with a pimply rash that it couldn’t possibly be related to that cold she had.
10. Don’t assume that once you’re finally gathered at the doctor’s office on a Sunday and the doctor is diagnosing strep that has now led to an all-over skin infection, don’t assume that at that point the doctor won’t look you in the eye and say, “Next time, bring her in sooner.”

Published in: on January 30, 2011 at 9:00 PM  Comments (1)  

Why You Must See Unretouched Images, and Why You Must See Them Repeatedly

I know you have bigger things to care about than whether or not Jennifer Aniston has freckles, but bear with me. I’m trying to raise a daughter over here. #photoshopofhorrors, an occasional series at Jezebel, takes to task media outlets that photoshop images of women, presenting instead distortions that pander to a beauty ideal and speak far too loudly. Particularly to young women, and anyone else who, for whatever reason, wrestles with body image and adequacy.

We have, actually, been talking about this for a long time. But it won’t go away, will most likely only get worse as access to media expands and new crops of young women come along — and they just keep coming along — to wrestle with it.

Jezebel published this brief email exchange, with just a hint of glee, and it promises more. The exchange between Jezebel’s editors and lawyers and those hired to shield Aniston reads a bit cute but hits a rock-solid note. Regardless of what Jezebel’s story is or isn’t about (which is of far more concern to the website than to me), we should all consider what we do and do not endorse in our media  – whether we’re the reader, the editor, or the megastar at the center of it all, making zillions of dollars while frolicking on the beach.

Published in: on August 27, 2010 at 3:15 PM  Leave a Comment  

Finish the sentence: “Everything I know about parenting I learned from…”

(all responses carefully considered)

Published in: on June 24, 2010 at 9:34 PM  Comments (2)  
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