Stay-at-home date

Last night, Bryan and I had such a fun evening together.  I was totally worn out after we put the kids to bed, but instead of curling up with a book or hopping on the laptop, Bryan and I talked about parenting for a while.  I’d mentioned that I was in the mood for a big piece of chocolate cake with chocolate butter-cream frosting.  Instead of that, Bryan suggested that we make a batch of cookies together.

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We made lemon sugar cookies (recipe and the Penzey’s dehydrated lemon peel) from Maretta.  Bryan and I almost never…REALLY almost never cook or bake together, so this was a lot of fun.  And oh, my, that butter-rich batter was yummy!  Here’s a blog post describing the cookies, showing scrumptious pictures, and giving the recipe.

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After our cookie-baking, we sat down and played a game of canasta.  It’s been years since we played canasta.  It used to be our favorite game.  On our honeymoon in Japan, we played it obsessively.  Then it got where Bryan beat me soundly every time and we (I) decided that we needed a break from Canasta to maintain marital harmony.  So it was fun to play again!

An evening having fun with my sweetie was the perfect way to start the weekend.  Hope your weekend is off to a good start too!

Sometimes there is unhappiness

I love staying home full-time with the kids.  We have so much fun together.  I love the quietness of it, the times we have for reading and painting and making meals.  I love to go on outings, meet up with friends, play in the yard for hours and hours.

I’m discovering that I am a mom who needs activity.  Even if the activity is just being outdoors and swinging or bike riding or chatting with neighbors (we do a lot of that!).  In contrast, I don’t do so well just hanging out.   Last weekend, I was the parent who got up with the kids in the mornings.  On Monday morning, Bryan noted that we’d had a feast for breakfast every morning: crepes on Saturday, pancakes on Sunday, and waffles on Monday.  All  included eggs and sausage and juice and coffee.  I told him that it was easier for me to have a project to do with the kids when we’re up early together.  “As opposed to just playing with them?” he replied.

He’s right.  If we’re just playing in the sun room, I get bored really fast.  I try to read a magazine or clean or pull out the laptop.  I’m not sure why.  I’m happy to read the kids books for long periods or play a game or color on the easel or play a make-believe game.  Andrew and Sylvie both like helping me cook, and they have fun cracking eggs, measuring milk, and whisking ingredients.   But if the kids are just hanging out, doing their thing, I don’t really have the patience…actually the interest…in staying tuned in.  Oh, and they love it when I just watch them play.  Bryan’s mom is an expert at that.  She loves watching kids play and do their thing.  Bryan seems pretty good at it too.  Ahh well, we all have our strengths!

So that’s something that’s been on my mind, and I thought I’d share.  Another thing on my mind is that we have a fair amount of Sylvia-unhappiness in our household.  That girl is amazing.  I love her over the moon.  She has so much energy and spirit and spunk.  When we go to restaurants, she greets all the other patrons with waves and “HI!!!” and dimples galore.  When she laughs (especially when Andrew makes her laugh), it’s heart-warming enough to make a statue crack a smile.

She also has passion and sadness.  We visited Sarah and baby Charlie today.  They were coming home from their morning stroller ride.  It made me think, “What a lovely daily ritual!  A stroller ride.  Why don’t we do regular stroller rides?”  The reason, I quickly remembered, is that from the time it was warm enough to take Sylvia on her earliest walks and stroller rides, she has gone on only a small number fully happy.  Invariably, the first half is good and the second half involves some screaming.  At least a third of the walk she needs to be carried (if she was in the stroller) or held (if she was in a carrier) as she screams and flails. The girl doesn’t like to be confined.

Sometimes I think I should just do things more frequently or consistently with her.  If we took a walk every morning at the same time to the same place, maybe that would be better.  It isn’t.  Or if it is, Andrew doesn’t want to go and he ends up being the one crying and needing to be carried.

Sylvia also tends to fuss or cry most times we drive in the car.  It’s not like when she was little and screamed the whole ride.  That got better when she was around six months.  It’s that she didn’t want to get in her car seat in the first place or she wants something Andrew has or she finished her snack and wants more.  For the most part, I can talk her down or cajole her into being calm, but keeping her happy in the car is an active process.  She doesn’t get calmed by music or audio books.  She sometimes likes to look at books or play with dolls, but then she drops them and I can’t reach them and that’s a big problem.

We had lunch with Bryan today.  His office is on the other side of town, and Sylvia cried all the way home.  She was saying, “Wa.” And I have no idea what she wanted.  She got her arms out her car seat in her tantrum.  I guess it all makes me appreciate quiet drives across town when I get them.

All this is to say that if I one day have a grandchild I’d like to remember that things as a parent are sometimes kind of rough.  And the rough parts can be mixed in, part and parcel with the sweet, darling, wonderful parts.  I’m already finding that I forget things about parenting.  I kind of forget what it was like to wake up many times in the night or to have a sick tiny baby.  Just like with child birth, the hard parts kind of fade into amnesia and the glowing parts stay crystal clear in my mind.  So I write this down not to complain, not even because today is particularly harder than any other day or week, but just to keep it real.

Raspberry cake

When Maretta and Kyle were visiting last weekend, we took an outing to Blue Skies Farm.  I had miss-read their website and didn’t realize that they were actually closed on Saturday (they sell at the Farmer’s Market that morning).  However, the owners were amazingly sweet, and they let us go ahead and roam the fields and pick what was available.  We came home with three brimming pints of berries.

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That afternoon, Maretta and I made a raspberry cake from her new William Sonoma cake cookbook.  We made a genoise cake with a rasberry and whipping cream filling.  It was good.

Cooking and spending time with my sister was even better than the cake, though.  Thanks for coming down to visit, guys!

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Sunflowers

Did you know that I love sunflowers?  I really do.  And this year, I’ve got a big mess of them growing in my back yard.  Here are some pictures to brighten your day.

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The sunflowers – yellow and brown – are full of American Goldfinches – yellow and black – and of bumble bees – yellow and black.  It’s like a moving, chirping, buzzing work of art.  In the picture below, there are actually four or five birds but all abut two are hiding.

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Owls

In the past few years, we’ve had Great Horned owls nesting in our neighborhood.  They’re amazing birds, and I feel so grateful that they’re hooting near our home.  This past month, we’ve seen lots of the adults and lots of the juveniles.  The babies still screech instead of hoot, but other than that, they look a lot like their parents.

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This guy here spread his wings out wide as if to intimidate me.

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We have lots of owl feathers on the ground in the neighborhood.  You can tell they are from owls because they’re so fluffy.  The downy-ness of their feathers helps make their flight silent – the easier to eat you, my dear!

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This one is jumping off his perch and flying away.  I don’t think he liked me taking his picture very much!

Last spring, the owlets fell out of the tree.  You can read about that saga here.  I wonder if one of the parents this year is little Hooter!

Shopping with my sister

Maretta and Kyle are in town for the weekend! It’s been such fun to spend the last couple days with them. We haven’t seen much of them in the last year it feel like. They live up in St. Paul, and compared to when Maretta, say, lived at home, I don’t get to spend as much time in her company!

So this spur-of-the-moment visit was most welcome. I’m glad we had no Labor Day weekend plans!

Bryan went golfing this morning, and Maretta and I got to take off for the afternoon – heading to Hilldale for some therapy sister-shopping. I love shopping with my sister! It’s kind of like shopping with my mom. Maretta and I had a leisurely three hours to spend hanging out together. For most of the trip, we didn’t purchase anything. But I found a couple items I love and need to share.

The first are these beautiful shoes.  Love. I love them.  Love love love.  I tried them on and gazed upon them.  I love their stitching and their redness and their spunk. mmmm

A while later, as I was looking for a new non-diaper bag purse, I ran across this beauty.  I love all the pockets and the size and the stitching.  I think I’m in to stitching on red leather today.

So I restrained myself, which is a good thing, because these would be ridiculous purchases.  But I know that some of my readers are lovers of shoes and bags, so enjoy!  And let me know if there are items that you’ve been coveting!

We don’t have plans for tomorrow.  I’m looking forward to having Bryan home.  It’s kind of the last day of summer. We’ll be enjoying this beautiful weather, I think!

Weekend activities…made it through

I made it through the last week pretty well.  Even yesterday, the anniversary of my mom’s untimely demise, didn’t turn out to be too rough a day.  For those of you who missed it in 2007, here’s Margot Babler’s obituary.

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I spent the whole day yesterday doing domestic duties.  It took me hours to pull the house back into shape, do a few loads of laundry, vacuum, clean litter boxes, go grocery shopping, and make dinner.  I feel proud that neither of the kids sustained any serious injuries while they amused themselves and “helped” me.  Simple Mom did a post about balancing housework and parenting.  What with all my work on Althea Dotzour Photography, I haven’t focused as much on domestic work these past months.

Oh, and by the way, if you’re on Facebook, become a fan of Althea Dotzour Photography!  If I’ve taken photos for you, you can write a quick review for me here!

I’ve done lots of great photo sessions this summer, and I’m excited about getting beautiful autumn portraits over the next few months.  Should be a good time to help families get family pictures for Christmas!  I’m currently booking sessions for September-November.  If you’re interested, drop me a note!

Last weekend was chilly to cold.  It was hard to believe that it was still August!  We’ve had a cold summer this year!  On Saturday morning, Bryan and I bundled up the kids and we went to the Orton Park Festival to hear David Landau sing.

Sylvia was quite intrigued but didn’t want to get off my lap to dance. And Andrew was transfixed but wanted to sit on one of our laps well away from the singing/dancing action.  It was a beautiful morning for some playground pictures!

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same kind of different as me

I really enjoyed reading the book Same Kind of Different As Me by Ron Hall and Denver Moore.  It’s a neat book about a friendship between homeless Denver and affluent, evangelical Ron.  Over the course of the book, Ron’s wife dies of cancer.  It was a therapeutic book to read over the last week.

A couple quotes that stuck with me:

I remember one time I was hunkered down in the hobo jungle with some folks.  We was talkin ’bout life, and this fella was talkin, and said, “People think they’re in control, but they ain’t.  The truth is, that which must befall thee must befall thee.  And that which must pass thee by must pass thee by.”
You’d be surpised what you can learn talkin to homeless people.  I learned to accept life for what it is.

… and later

The truth about it is, whether rich or poor or somethin in between, this earth ain’t no final restin place.  So in a way, we is all homeless–just working our way toward home.

Tomorrow is the three-year anniversary of little Allen Lerner’s birth.  Here’s a post I wrote back in 2006.  September 1st was the day that they discovered that he was no longer alive.  My heart is full of sadness for the baby who I so wish had lived and for the dark and heavy road Heather and Michael have had to travel since then.

Heather and Michael just moved to a new home in Takoma Park last weekend.  I’m sending them lots of love, and I’m sure they could use any loving thoughts you can send their way.

Grace

Thank you, thank you, thank you to all the people out there who sent me loving, encouraging, thoughtful notes after I posted about this being the two-year anniversary of my my mom’s death.  I’ve felt comforted, and in the days since I wrote that post, I’ve stopped feeling sad.  Instead, I feel calm.   It helps me a lot to be able to pour out my messy thoughts, and then to (amazingly, it seems) feel the responses come spilling back, feel the support and the community in which I live.

The last couple nights, I’ve been sleeping well again.  I still miss that my mom isn’t here, but the anniversary part of it feels alright.

So thanks for reading and sending back loving notes and prayers and thoughts.  I appreciate them all.  You make me feel like dancing.

What a sweet expression!
Mom and Andrew - March 2006