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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Growth spurt

She napped for two hours, ate HALF A PIZZA, went to bed, slept 10 hours, got up and ate TWO BOWLS OF OATMEAL.

At this rate, by this afternoon she’ll be asking to borrow the car.

Published in: on November 18, 2010 at 6:29 AM  Leave a Comment  
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The place in my heart where I can go…

when, out in the world,

light is too bright and sounds are too harsh

 

 

 

and that fellow there, he matters,

but he doesn’t,

but oh, he does

 

 

for the place in my heart

is built of one solid truth:

no matter the state of things with the grown-ups

the weather, the words, the days, the years

 

Hallowe'en 2010

 

he and she will always be

 

Published in: on November 4, 2010 at 9:09 AM  Leave a Comment  
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Allow me to concede the conservatives a point on this one.

It amazes me to think of the things I used to not do for myself: Other people would fix our meals, deliver our food and drugstore purchases, change the oil, wash our clothes, organize my closets, clean my house, weed my garden, straighten my hair, wash my dogs, pick flowers for the table, arrange my travel, hem my pants, detail our cars, schedule our appointments, wax my eyebrows and paint my toenails. I relied on the vet to tell me when my dogs’ shots were due, the dentist to inform me it was time for a cleaning and the bank to balance my checkbook. Facebook sent birthday wishes to friends, Red Envelope wrapped and mailed gifts, the DVR remembered to record Lost and the stationer signed our Christmas cards.

Not to mention all the feeding, bathing, dressing, stroller-pushing, singing, changing, playing, carrying, comforting, kissing and hugging I compensated someone else to do for my daughter.

And it still was not enough, never enough, nowhere near enough, and certainly never as rewarding as — who knew? — an afternoon snuggle with a cup of tea and picture books.

Everything I’d heard about has come to pass: it’s hell to drop down to one income; housework does expand to fill every available minute; if there is a television available one will eventually allow it to babysit while one takes a phone call; there are days — many days — when a stay-at-home parent whines louder than the preschooler by 4 PM and yes, it is possible to wear the same shirt for days.

But: It’s so damn great. It’s simple, for one thing. We eat, we play, we do chores, we putter. The plants are watered and the office is organized and my thank-you notes are caught up (almost) and our clothes are ironed and we actually think through grocery lists before shopping, itself a more pleasant experience at 10 AM on a Tuesday morning than it ever was at 8 PM, tired and impatient and trying to remember when I last bought milk. I am not crafty, not at all, but we’ve painted and colored and glued and pounded and squished and chalked. And oh, are we healthy. I can’t remember the last time we ate fast food, and we go to the gym all the time. I floss and moisturize and tweeze  – mundane maintenance I used to rush through — while she splashes in the tub with mermaids and porpoises and adventurous princesses. We nap.

Most surprisingly, I have not been bored a moment. Either I’m resolutely dull, or there’s more to see here than I thought. It’s much more challenging than I expected to negotiate vegetables into a preschooler’s mouth, requiring all sorts of new tricks and variations, and our stricken budget challenges every math skill I have. I find the scholarship on preschool education strangely engaging, blogs by moms peculiarly engrossing and G-rated movies adorable and endearing. If I ever decide that I like to cook, send search and rescue.

As fall arrives, instead of obsessing over my syllabus and renewing my campus parking pass I’ll be packing lunch and settling Anna into her new school. Three years ago I often spent hours and hours alone; now I have no idea where to begin. There will be days when this is hard, days when I will need to remind myself that this is my choice. There will be days when I recall something I used to do, someplace I used to go, something I used to get invited to and oh, I will miss it. I will return to work one day and I will discover that my options are different now and limited, that the ladder I was rapidly ascending is no longer under my feet but instead has shifted to accommodate someone else’s career, I’m sure I will have second guesses. And third ones.

Those days are coming.

But for now? Fingerpaints and puzzles and sparkly shoes await, so:

Sorry, I’m busy.

Published in: on September 5, 2010 at 3:32 PM  Comments (3)  
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“Her early leaf’s a flower; But only so an hour…”

Anna cried when she saw the dying amaryllis and asked me to make it "stay little, like me." If I could do such things, love, right now would last forever.

Nature’s first green is gold
Her hardest hue to hold.
Her early leaf’s a flower;
But only so an hour.
Then leaf subsides to leaf.
So Eden sank to grief,
So dawn goes down to day.
Nothing gold can stay.

– Robert Frost

Published in: on July 16, 2010 at 6:42 AM  Leave a Comment  
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