to my husband
January 31, 2016 § 7 Comments
It’s been an exciting couple of days. You’re on the road, re-introducing a body of work that has been a labor of love for many years; something that was previously a hobby is now your chosen occupation.
We’ve only spoken on the phone, briefly, but already the smile in your stories tells me everything I need to know. That’s the thing about doing what you love, it lights you up from the inside. You speak and act from a truer place and that energy is infectious, it draws people and opportunities into your life that fan the flames of passion.
I’m proud of you and excited for you, inspired by you and confident in your ability. I’m also encouraged by the message you are providing our children about living beyond the status quo; showing them with your actions the value of believing in yourself by taking charge of your dreams and making self a priority.
In all the daily demands of grown-up responsibilities we can lose sight of joy, shy away from risks. It’s so easy to strive for stability; consistency and predictability offer essential measures of peace – financially, mentally and emotionally. As parents we are providers of necessities, but also of inspiration.
We encourage our children to dream big and believe in themselves, but we must first demonstrate the work of living a dream with confidence.
This past year was difficult, it would have been easy to give in to hurt, anger, or disappointment; to be submissive and defer your happiness to predictable pursuits of less fulfilling work. You might have chosen something to get by, a job that you endured for chunks of time until you could dream out loud, but instead you invested, confidently, in self.
This is not to say the path you have chosen is easy. The pursuit of happiness demands attention and care.
You are teaching our children the work of dreams and the value of self so that they, too, might choose a path less traveled. I’m looking forward to hearing more about the past of couple days, excited about the work of months to come as you carve your way.
Love, Me
in dreams awake
January 11, 2013 § Leave a comment
Tucked beneath an evening sky ripples of laughter woke me from a dreamless sleep. The sound always makes me still, as if by moving I might disrupt the cause and break the spell. My daughter’s laughter fills our quiet home with energy and amusement even in her sleep. Her days and dreams undistinguishable, joy infecting sleep and dreams inviting possibility into her days; she moves between sunlight and moonlight without boundaries.
inherent wisdom
January 3, 2013 § 2 Comments
There are truths we know with unspoken certainty. They echo quietly in our hearts, tugging at our conscious minds, seeking action and holding us tightly to our sense of self. This is how I welcomed this New Year; appreciative of a new beginning, carrying my dreams dressed in hope. To my children:
Dreams are visions we invite into possibility with movement, lines sketched in our sleep that we fill with color and give weight with actions. Dream well and move consciously through your days. Embrace possibility and believe in yourselves.
heart wish
July 25, 2012 § 2 Comments
On a warm Fall day in the company of an eclectic collection of preschool mothers relaxing into lazy conversations while our children settled into their first day of school, a friend placed her newborn daughter in my arms. Already the mother of a little boy who filled every space of my heart with joy I suddenly found my heart wishing for a little girl.
I returned home that day filled with a quiet hope and cautious curiosity, eager to share my heart’s wish for our little family with my husband. After years of committing ourselves to exploring our days with our son, entirely content to dote on our smiling, curious tiny companion my husband and I agreed we were both ready to begin a new chapter in our lives. And so our minds and hearts began gathering dreams of someone new and yet unknown.
Like most pregnant mothers my greatest wish was for a healthy child. I set aside little girl daydreams and embraced the experience indulging in rest, random cravings, and dwindling days of Mommy & Me adventures with my son.
Then, on an August morning, my husband and I welcomed our daughter. Holding her gently against my chest I marveled at the realization of a wish come true. She fit into the quiet places of our hearts as naturally as the rhythm of our days.
Eight years later I can barely count the blessings of her presence. I dreamed of a little girl who would climb trees in princess dresses, but her life is greater than my dreams. She is familiar and foreign, a fascinating contradiction of predictable chaos. She walks with one foot off the path, testing her boundaries and creating a new experience.
I nurtured lessons in compassion and kindness, but my daughter’s strength humbles me. She is the first to out a wrong, will stand confidently in a place of discomfort, lend a voice when another will not speak in their own defense. She does all this alongside vulnerable moments of insecurity. She struggles in traditional areas of academia, but excels in the unwritten lessons of life. I marvel at her wisdom and wonder at her doubts.
The little girl who began as a wish fills our days with bigger dreams; she is a blessing that multiplies joy and lessons sorrow with her smile.
house & home
May 6, 2012 § Leave a comment
My husband and I have always spoken of change with an expectation that each occasion presented an opportunity to realize the promise of an abstract sense of possibility. We dream out loud on subjects ranging from work and children, to hobbies and home. Some subjects we address with a romantic sense of whimsy; our dreams alluring for their stark contrast to reality. There are dreams that if realized I might miss their uncertain possibility and other dreams more beautiful once weighted in reality.
Our first home remodeling project came to fruition in the glow of newlywed ignorance. The absence of expectations created a sense of adventure that helped the days pass with tolerance for temporary inconveniences. Years later in our second home dust and disaster were equally acceptable as we converted my husband’s childhood home into something of our own. More recently I began to dread the reality of our remaining remodeling projects with the same measure of anxiety as enthusiasm for the anticipated expectation of change.
Fine layers of dust and the disharmony that accompanies the chaotic atmosphere of construction left me with all the patience of a two-year old. I wanted to sit on our narrow stairway, blocking the path and halting the progress of a much needed renovation. Even the wallpaper is ready to retire, curling self-consciously from its seam. It is time for my vision to expand and encompass a moment my husband and I have dreamed of; the end of a once long list of house projects.
As we near this moment I pause to give thanks for the generous spirit that lovingly makes our house, our home. Long hours between work and play were devoted to each room of our home. My husband tirelessly transforming his childhood home into our children’s home.
I have happy memories of our kitchen floor, bare concrete filled with chalk outlines of our children’s forms; beneath my office carpet there are painted footprints in the pattern of our daughter’s toddler steps from her eager endeavors to paint; the memory of my son proudly demolishing an old brick fireplace with the awkward weight of a sledgehammer balanced by the twinkle in his eyes; tiny scratches in our hardwood floor stir memories of our puppy. The strength of each room’s walls keep us safe and the love inside them guards our dreams. Without the company of my family and the possibility of dreams, our home is just a house.
for joy
January 13, 2012 § 2 Comments
I was very young when I declared to my parents and a family friend that I wanted to be a teacher when I grew up. My step mother was an elementary school teacher and this afforded me the gift of visiting a school in the quiet months of summer. I have a deep affinity for the space of classrooms, knowledge resting among the walls and tucked in reference books for the finding. My childhood declaration was met with doubt and adult reminders that prioritized monetary gain over dreams. I did what children do, I hid my wish keeping it safe from judgment until it was forgotten.
By the time I left for college, my future was mapped with others’ shoulds: You should be an attorney. I studied in preparation for law school; choosing classes dense with reading and writing, subjects that were diverse and demanded critical thought. I was hiding among subjects that I loved; my spirit whispering over others’ shouts. I was immersed in books that inspired me, sharing thoughts among peers and professors that lit fires in the quiet corners of my mind.
Then, before committing to a career, I became a mother. Each day I wake to life lessons and opportunities to guide my children. I gather them on adventures into books that push at the boundaries of their world. My tiny students with unique needs perpetually lead me to structure spontaneous lessons to help them understand their world. I am inspired and challenged on a path where I am neither teacher nor lawyer, ironically spending my days teaching and advocating for my children as I navigate school work and legal rights in an effort to provide for my children’s needs. My childhood dream found direction in motherhood.
As my children share their dreams, I try consciously to celebrate their statements of self. I want them to listen carefully to the whispers that come from within and to chart their lives with choices that resonate and bring them joy. I try to do this with words married with action, here. I am teaching my children to make room for joy in their lives, while creating moments of joy for myself.
For as long as I can remember I have written letters. Quick notes passed in classrooms, summer letters to school friends, love letters tied with heartstrings, and dreams scribbled in the margins of my days. I write for clarity and for joy. My children know that I do this and that writing is an expression that brings me happiness and comfort in the way building with LEGOs and creating artwork bring them pleasure and peace.
Slowly, I have invited my words to become a larger piece of my life. I do this cautiously, carrying with me an uncertainty born of those early statements of self among family and friends. I began here, where few could connect my words to myself, sheltering my feelings of joy from judgment. I still hear others’ shoulds. Throughout my life others have said: You should write. Should seems to shadow my joy, expectations suffocating pleasure. I have begun to internalize others’ opinions of how, what, when, why I write as measurements against which I gauge my ability and validate my efforts.
Then something special happened. My husband discovered pieces of me he didn’t know between the lines of my posts. My son serendipitously discovered a post and kept reading, celebrating my words with a hug. My daughter exclaimed proudly to a friend, my mother writes. People I love began to identify me by something I love to do.
I know my husband wishes this act of writing could evolve into a larger piece of our life, that someone would happily stumble into my words and open a door to something else. I know these are logical wishes and that his faith in me is a source of love. I am still growing, learning and dreaming; uncertain how to define why, how, when, and what. I am happy for a place to store my thoughts, for my children, for some day, for me. I write to invite joy and dreams into my day.
nesting
January 9, 2012 § 2 Comments
A little over a year ago I scribbled curiously and cautiously on the barren walls of my blog. My thoughts mere ramblings, disconnected and directionless; I plucked ideas and words from the corners of my mind like old toys stored for safekeeping, unused and unshared. I began to unpack my thoughts, drawing them into my days and placing them gingerly where they might be shared. Slowly, I have welcomed family and a handful of friends to read my ramblings, met strangers whose words resonated among mine. I have come to think of this space as my own and in that transition from an inconspicuous private writing to a personal exchange among friends, I have begun nesting.
Seeking a more personal setting for my thoughts, I typed the words blog design into a search engine and sifted through endless pages of results for something simple and affordable. I was happily surprised to find something charming early in my endeavor. I purchased what I considered a tailored slip cover for my space, something crisp and fresh that promised a quick makeover. I soon came to realize how much I did not know. I spent a lost evening staring at my CSS and messaging a patient designer. The entire experience was humbling and I quickly set aside my template, feeling apologetic and incapable; not wanting to burden the designer with my blatant ignorance.
Wistful and overwhelmed, I continued my search the way some doodle images in the margins of notebooks. Scattered moments of free time were lost to design dreams. I edited my search to encompass assistance. The results were many, but I found myself returning to one site finding myself at home among the images. I gazed lustfully at colors and patterns in much the same way I longingly extract a beautiful item of clothing wanting to slip into its shell, but conscious of the cost and impracticality of the indulgence. My husband, aware that I do not spend recklessly, voiced a willingness to gift me the experience of working with a designer for my space. Torn between enthusiasm and a feeling of guilt over something self-indulgent, I moved forward carefully guarding my joy.
My initial decisions were divided between style and personality. Completing my request for assistance I looked to the collection of designers, their portfolios, and their personal blogs trying to find a voice and style that felt familiar. I was searching for someone who would understand me in the impersonal, fragmented notes that collectively outlined my wishes; a stranger that could befriend me and lead me through a series of choices among which I would find a picture of myself.
As I receive edited samples to my future site, I attempt to scribble thoughts that might contextualize my opinions. The voice on the other side of my letters has been patient as I sketch with words my lifestyle, personality, comfort level, concerns, and dreams. We are still exchanging letters and sifting through choices. I am embracing this experience of creating something new in partnership with someone new, opening myself to each choice and absorbing the experience wholeheartedly. I am both anxious and eager to settle my home and invite you to join me.
growing pains
July 29, 2011 § 2 Comments
As my children stretch their independence and their abilities extend toward self-reliance I find myself stuck in a place of transition; caught between the experiences we have outgrown and the unmarked space of our futures. When my daughter’s language skills first formed concise thoughts, she inquired: Mommy, what do you want to be when I grow up? My heart and head stumbled over the answer. In truth, I was so busy being my children’s mother I couldn’t imagine what else to be. Her question, formed in innocence and curiosity has followed me, tucked between my conscious and subconscious thoughts like an item on my to-do list: buy groceries, choose future career, finish the laundry.
I try to recall my childhood fantasies, but I have outgrown tiny tutus and tap shoes. I still hear the echo of teachers’ and my parents’ voices projecting me on various academic paths; titles I wish would resonate if only to know my place. Motherhood was a happy reprieve from committing to a career. With my daughter’s prompting and no clear answer, I find myself window shopping for the future.
Where others create careers, I found only interests. In college, my favorite space was a classroom; unique personalities and opinions challenging old theories and projecting new possibilities. Subject matter was secondary to the experience, but my favorite teachers pushed boundaries in conversations centered in English, Psychology, Sociology, and Philosophy. I wonder now if my liberal arts education could still hold the key to doors of opportunity promised over years of academic guidance.
I am happy here, in this moment as a mother. Still, I sometimes look ahead and feel the familiar panic of my youth as old questions revisit bearing uncertainty and insecurity. Shouldn’t I know what I want to be? I envy the uncluttered wisdom of youth; tiny people dressed in costumes clearly marking their future with dreams. Firefighters, teachers, doctors, scientists, and dancers confident in their childhood career placement. I wish for a simple answer and the ability to demonstrate the passion and conviction of owning a dream. To model for my children the drive and ambition, hard work and stamina of working tirelessly towards a gratifying sense of self outside our home. To know myself more completely, and for my children to see, the woman in the footsteps of their mother.
the robot
May 9, 2011 § 1 Comment
My son’s mind is perpetually generating new ideas and his pockets weighted with an eclectic assortment of mysterious pieces void of rhyme or reason. His notebooks are filled with blueprints and lists, evidence of philosophical engineering. Filed unsystematically among his homework papers I uncovered a list in his rushed penmanship titled: Robot. He proceeded to map a plan on folded up, forgotten paper.
- take classes
- buy gadgets
- buy equipment
- design robot
- hire volunteer professionals & experts for free
- build parts
- assemble
- etc.
- win Nobel Prize
- pay Dad back
- throw this list away casually
I am missing information, but the self-assurance underlying his plan is spectacular. I wonder when we stop reaching for the moon and focus on the space between our steps.