Dear Bella,

9.22.2015 1:39 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
Oh, Schnipps. Six? What can I say about who you are right now? How can I put you into words so that one day when you're thirty with babies of your own you will be able to go back here, to see yourself through my eyes?

You are incredibly smart. We've done your first year of homeschooling and are just about to begin your second year. It's going exactly as I thought it would in your last letter, sometimes it's perfect, sometimes it's so difficult. You've skipped first grade already, which because we are homeschooling, is a bit of a technicality. You're still in the first grade community class at school - you go once a week and it starts soon. You loved it last year and you can't wait to go again.

Something that is new about you in the last year is that all of a sudden, you became brave. I don't know how this happened. My sweet cautious girl who was once afraid of playground equipment is swinging out on ropes over the lake. You showed me a video of you doing this with Daddy and I just had to see it for myself, so I made you both take me back to the spot you found and show it to me again. Daddy held you and pulled you back so far and then just let go, just like that. You flew out over the lake, your hair flying in the breeze and it took my breath away. A year ago you wouldn't have even considered doing something like this. You're teaching yourself to swim and Daddy is teaching you to climb mountains and you're so amazing, the way you move and run and sing and try. I love watching you grow up - it's the most beautiful thing in the world. Once from an airplane, I watched the sun set for about five hours - it feels like that. It goes on and on and if I stop to think about it too much the fleeting beauty of it hits me in the stomach and I forget to breathe for a second.

We learned a few weeks ago that technically, you're known as a "gifted child". I don't love the way that sounds because it makes it sound like other children don't have gifts or abilities that make them special, which is obviously untrue. What it does mean is that your brain works in a really unique way. A better way to say it is that you're an asynchronous learner. Your brain has developed much faster than your physical body or your emotions. You're able to understand and memorize things incredibly quickly. You have an incredibly high IQ. We had you tested at the beginning of this school year, and the psychologist was amazed at you. I was relieved - it means I'm not crazy. I do not have an incredibly high IQ and sometimes I struggle to really understand you. There is something about you that's just different. Not better or worse, just different. Can I tell you something? This is tricky for me. It's tricky because it does make you really difficult to parent sometimes. You're so logical, you understand so much, and you tend to argue a lot in an effort to understand something completely. Sometimes this makes me very tired. The other part that is tricky is that sometimes it's hard to be proud of you publicly or to explain to people what you are like without sounding like I'm bragging instead of just really proud. I have always cared too much what other people think, and I think sometimes when people hear how smart you are, they can act differently toward you. People (including me) can be really silly. You have a friend who is such an amazing artist, which is something you and I are not very good at. I just love seeing the art that he makes. I know of another kid who can karate chop a board in half. I know a two year old who colors perfectly. That's amazing to me. I love that kids are different and amazing in all sorts of ways. You happen to be remarkably intelligent. That's not bragging - it's part of who God made you to be and I want to be able to celebrate that in an honest way. It's obviously part of His amazing plan for your life, just like I think that art is a part of who God made your friend to be. All of those things are beautiful expressions of who He is, and I love seeing the parts of His personality played out in different people. It's why we're all needed, it shows me we all have a part to play. There is no way in the world, that even if I tried my hardest, I could be a neurosurgeon. You could. I can see it in you. I can see the incredibly meticulous way you do things, I can see you make connections and form concepts and then think in a really implicational way about those concepts and draw conclusions. You've just always been like that. I can't change it any more than I could change the fact that you're very short and tiny. I'm stunned by you on a continual basis.

I heard once that true humility is the ability to be knows for exactly who you are, no more AND no less. Making you seem like less is just as unjust as making yourself seem like more. We are trying to teach you that it's okay that "all the kids in the gymnastics class are better and faster than you" as well as that, "technically, you're kind of a genius." Both statements are true. It's who you are, and I love all of it. I love that you keep trying gymnastics, even though you struggle with it. I love seeing you be brave and persistent. I love watching you do a math problem or write a story, or build and invent something. You're amazing. All of you.

I pray somehow that I can raise you to be the kind of person who doesn't base her worth on the way we are compared to others. I think comparison is a fact of life, it's something we all do. It can be good. It shows us where we are, like a spot on a map. Somehow though, you need to know that if you become a neurosurgeon or a waitress, a ballerina or a construction worker, I want you to be happy and proud of who you ARE. Not what you can do. I pray that the former never gets lost in the latter. That you find your identity in your character instead of your ability. If somehow I can teach you that, then you're set. All the rest will just be details.

You are smart.
You are brave.
You are kind.
You are compassionate.
You are beautiful.
You are independent.
You are funny.
You are strong.
You are enough.
You are so deeply and wildly loved by Jesus.

You are also so incredibly loved by me. All of you. I love your wild hair and your huge questioning eyes. I love your fierce determination and your calculating logic. I love the way you dance and sing. I love that you are funny and silly and sweet. I love that you are a protective big sister, and a strong-willed daughter. I wouldn't change you for anything in the whole world - you are exactly as you were meant to be, and I'm really honored to be your Mama.

I love you much Isabella. So so much.
Mama


Dear Bella,

9.11.2014 3:48 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
You turned five a few weeks ago (for the sake of the continuity of these letters I will shout, "five?! What?!" in stunned disbelief) and this year has held a few huge milestones. You became a big sister this year and everyone keeps telling me that pretty soon you're going to be over it, and the shine will wear off and you'll be jealous or despise your sister (people are so nice!) and there's just not the slightest sign of that at all. You ADORE Emma. You are the best big sister ever, and we couldn't be prouder of you. You're helpful and sweet and funny and Emma grins at you all the time. The other day she did a big belly laugh for the very first time, and it was just because you smiled at her. You did it again and again and it was perfect, watching the two of you laugh together. I'm so happy God decided to give us Emma, not just for us, but for you. 
The other big thing is that we decided to homeschool you and we have begun your first week. There is currently a terrible teachers strike in our province so I suppose everyone is homeschooling but we are doing so intentionally. Like so many things we go through together, I am scared and you are excited and eager. I am sure I will fail, and you are encouraging me that "I'm so happy you're my teacher, Mama. You're going to be amazing at this." Seriously? You're the best kid ever.
Firstly, let me get on record that I'm not the average homeschooling mom. Not the ones I envision anyway. There are two (well lots, but two major) obstacles in the way of my being a good teacher.
1. I am impatient.
2. I was terrible at school myself. I feel like this is the blind leading the blind.
I also don't sew, make my own granola, or know how to make a bento box with a nutritious lunch that is also a scene from the Amazon jungle for our Amazon unit study. I am not THAT mom.
There are a couple of huge reasons why we wanted to homeschool you.
1. I love watching you learn something. It's one of my favorite parts of being a mom, and call me selfish, but I didn't want to hand off that privilege to someone else. The moment when you get something and you look up at me and you're so proud of yourself is one of your best expressions, and you have a few.
2. Kindergarten here went full-time a few years back and it seems to me that five years old (just barely five!) is too young to be away from me for the equivalent of a full-time job. Well maybe not here, but in places like France those are totally full-time hours. See! I'm teaching you stuff already! Remember: get your first job in France. Because the hours are good, and well, macarons. Also, I'm coming with because you may not move so far away and also to help you eat the cookies. Anyway, when you figure out the schedule of public school, the school gets you for all your best hours. I get all my least favorite things about being a mom:
-breakfast and getting out the door in a hurry.
-the afternoons when you're tired but it's too late to nap.
-dinner, bath, and getting ready for bed.
The only nice thing I'm getting is bedtime cuddles and the weekends and I'm telling you buddy, that is LAME! It feels like a custody arrangement. Evenings and weekends. 
So I'm being selfish with you simply because you're mine and I can do it right now. I haven't got much against public education, other than my own experience and the ridiculous notion that a kindergarten child and a grade 12 student require the same amount of classroom time. 

You're smart buddy. You taught yourself to read - so much for patting myself on the back for that one. You do things all the time that amaze us all, and I'm proud of you. I'm so happy that I have this time to spend with you. I want to say that we are going to rock this year together and this is going to be MY THING. I'm going to be a rock star homeschooling mom. I'm guessing that the truth looks a little more like this:
I love you. I think this is the best thing for you. I want to try. I promise to try to be more patient and to ask Jesus to make me into the kind of mom that you need me to be, and not just the kind of mom who can make granola. (I really want to learn to make granola.) We're probably going to have a couple of fights and I'm probably going to think I was crazy to ever try this in the first place. You're probably going to wish at some point that I'd just sent you to school. But I love you. I want this for you, this time with you to teach you and watch you learn and grow. We'll figure it out. We always do. 

Your Smile

8.28.2014 2:27 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
My Emma,

You are 183 days old. 26 weeks. 6 months. I want to say it in a way that makes you sound the newest, because time is passing too swiftly, blowing by me and leaving me bewildered. I brought you home last week, I'm sure. And yet, you are such a permanent part of my heart, of my identity, that in some way you have always existed, because the place in me that has wanted and loved you has always existed. Your Grandma Morel talks about how when we choose to have a baby, we co-create with God. Not just a baby, a person who lives for a lifetime, but a soul, who isn't confined to days and weeks and years and experiences. You are an eternal being. There is no reality in which you will not exist - you are forever. For me, this is the most shockingly beautiful and crushingly terrifying thing about being your mother. 

I hate so much of the way parenting is presented lately. I won't lie to you, it's harder than you will be able to know until you wade through it yourself, but it's so much more achingly beautiful than you're told to expect nowadays. Have I been covered in the unmentionable bodily fluids of another? Yes. Did the actual process of bringing you from my womb into this world emotionally, physically, and psychologically change something inside me, possibly forever? Yes. But Emma, this morning when I came in to see if you were somehow still asleep on my bed, your turned your big dark eyes at me and gave me this SMILE. And somehow nobody told me the way that smile would transform me. I heard a lot of stories about childbirth, went in prepared for the awful and graphic horror of it, but no stories about that grin. I heard a lot about how "everything will never be the same again, your freedom and independence is a thing of the past. And even if you had it, you'll be too tired to enjoy it." I never heard about how I'd trade every good day, every shred of "freedom" for a smile like that. They talk about parenting as though it's such intense sacrifice, and they're not wrong, but it's sacrifice after winning the lottery. It's done out of abundance, because they can't explain the way that that smile will make it worth it. You make everything worth it, in a way that feels almost stupid to say. Like, "I got a mansion for a dollar, but I still had to spend that dollar." And people who don't understand will lament the loss of your dollar. They will talk of inferior, worthless things they could have bought with that money, and others will join in and talk of the work and exhaustion of caring for a house that big, and maybe they should have gone with a 99 cent cheeseburger instead. Idiocy. 

I adore you. You're amazing - an eternal soul wrapped in a pink blanket grinning at me like you've never been happier in your life to see someone, and you haven't. It's a look that as you get older you will only see in airport arrival terminals, and on the faces of grooms as their brides enter the church. It's that smile, and you give it to me all the time, and I drink it in and soak it up and allow you to become my favorite part of my identity and the rest of the world be damned. I don't care if it's the 21st century and women are supposed to find their identity in careers or themselves or feminism or some other such nonsense. 

Here's the thing, Little: Jesus looks at you like that. Always. He looks at me like that. He is enamoured with us, and this is why having kids will be the very best choice you will ever ever make. Because somewhere in there, you will understand my love for you for the first time. The day they hand you your baby and your feelings are so big you are sure you will break wide open with ecstasy, promise me you will think, "my mother loves me like this." Because also, you will know how Jesus loves you. He calls us his children, even refers to himself as a mother, because there's nothing like that feeling. It will make you understand the cross, and how he could go gladly. 

You and your sister have given me that. And sometimes it's hard, and I show you my humanity so often. I'm tired, and things are different, and sometimes I don't handle that change with the grace you deserve from me. But never let it be said of me that I didn't LOVE being your mom. You are so worth it, and you make me so happy. That smile, Emma. I can't even. Contrary to the above, there are no words that do your smile any justice at all. 

I love you, Little. So much. 
Mama

All Grown Up

5.12.2014 4:11 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
It's been such a long time since I've done anything interesting. Something that wouldn't just be something that a million moms do a million times over. Something that would be amazing across demographics. I gave birth to a baby and two sets of forceps with very little in the way of pain medication a little while ago, but if you're a 20 year old guy, you just googled forceps and then winced, and if you're a mom you crossed your legs without thinking about it. I felt pretty damn amazing afterwards. It was the most hard core thing I've ever done. Harder than trekking Anapurna (and I nearly died doing that). Actually, truth be told, I didn't feel amazing. I felt like I accomplished something horrible that I never thought I'd have to do. Like sawing my own arm off if I'd been that guy in 127 Hours. Yeah it takes balls, but not really the kind that anyone wants to say they have. Also, similar to sawing off a limb, it's nothing you ever plan to do, nor does anyone envy you the opportunity. 
When I was young and single I travelled, doing missionary work in places that looked like National Geographic spreads. I have a vague and heartbreaking remembrance of what it felt like then, to be doing something that mattered that much, something that required everything I had to give it. The girl who did that was young, impossibly naive and optimistic, and yet owned something I desperately want back but don't know how to retrieve. I don't really know her any more, she seems like a dream I had of myself, wearing her purpose like a pair of shoes that no longer fit this version of me. I traded in those shoes. Now it's flip flops and yoga pants, hair in a quick ponytail as I rush to Walmart by myself hoping to get my groceries bought before my baby wakes up at home demanding to nurse and Peter is left helpless. 
There's parts of my life that that girl wouldn't possibly understand. Last night, my body curled comfortably around the soft sighing ball that is Emma, who sleeps better cuddled into her mama than in any fancy bassinet whose reviews swear that all babies who used it immediately fell into perfect, dreamless, all night sleep. Yes, I totally fell for that. She wouldn't understand that today that same beautiful bundle puked all over my bare feet and I was so thankful because I was worried her diaper had burst. Thankful for puke. Huh. Who'd have thought?
I'd have thought that I'd somehow be totally and completely fulfilled doing this. I've  said so many times that I could happily be a 1950's housewife. Maybe that's true, if I'd have been born in the 30's. I've worked at a job that I should make a career. I should stay there, taking a year off every time I have a baby, and build a little retirement fund for Peter and I. I should want that more than I do. And I should love being home more than I do. I am good and truly lost.
I feel like some part of myself, the part that was adventurous and interesting and passionate, has been put to bed like a petulant three year old. Also, like a three year old, it's refusing to stay in bed. It feels as though I grew up, and I don't like where I've ended up. There's these little stands of rebellion I keep making, as though they matter. Refusing to get a mortgage or a minivan. Keeping my eyes open for opportunities abroad. Refusing to settle down here. Refusing to unpack fully. I'm ready to go somewhere, be something else, at a moments notice. And you'd think at this point that I'd take a moment and say that I have children now. Two little girls that need those things, the stability they offer. I'd turn this post into examining the parts of my life that are beautiful and perfect (there are many) and then I'd go to the mortgage broker and put down a root or two and stop being such a baby.
And yet, all I can think is that I don't want my girls to have that life. I don't want to have that life. I want to give them something else, be something else. Mostly, I want to give them a mom that's being true to herself, because that other part of me, the part that hiked Anapurna is still a part of who I am now. I thought it would go away if I just grew up enough. I don't want to give them a mom who put her dreams away until they were older. I want to teach them to follow their hearts by showing them that I'll follow mine. I'd feel like such a hypocrite telling Bella that she can do or be anything she wants to be. I haven't. It's laughable how little my "job" fits my personality. 
I don't know what that means, or what it looks like. I don't know yet. And I'm not negating the moments of absolute perfection that being a mom can be. There are moments that are startling in their beauty and the stillness they bring to my racing, restless, heart. But this isn't it. I'm not done yet. I can't be. 

Emma's Birth Story

2.28.2014 9:01 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
I don't know how or when to write this. I need it to be fresh in my head, but I want a little distance from it. I also wonder if I can purge it like this - spit it out onto paper, if I can leave it there, pick up my daughter and walk away from it. That's how I picture it. How do I write it? It was awful and terrifying and graphic. It gave me my daughter, and so somehow I am grateful, and yet if I knew it would go the same way again, I know for certain I'd be done. I may be anyway. I don't need another child, may not anyway, but certainly not if that's what would happen.

On Saturday I went into labour. Not false labour, but steady contractions that picked up from 3pm and progressed until about 1:30am. Then they slowed until 5:30am Sunday morning when they picked way up. And then so suddenly that I wondered if I'd imagined it all, everything stopped. We went to the hospital to double check, and I was at 3cm, but it was over. They told me to go home and sleep. I was bitterly disappointed, felt like I'd worked half the night for nothing. But I went home and slept, and slept, and slept some more. And then waited for two days for it to start back up.

Tuesday I couldn't pretend I wasn't itchy any more. It was starting to wake me up. I kept hoping I'd just naturally go into labour, that we wouldn't need a doctor and a bunch of interventions, but when it became clear that it could be a while before that happened I went for a blood test. I knew it was positive anyway. I prayed like crazy that I'd naturally go back into labour, and that didn't happen.

Wednesday they called me and told me to meet them at the hospital, my levels were too high. We arranged a sitter for Bella, and went in with our overnight bag. We did a stress test, Emma was doing great and they repeated the blood test. The OB came in, same doctor that I had with Bella. He asked what we thought. I said given that I was 38 weeks that it would be stupid to go home and wait to get sicker given that the risk to cholestasis is sudden intrauterine death. He agreed, they gave me some gel to kick start contractions and said they'd check with me in an hour. 20 minutes later I had my first strong contraction, and an hour later we made our way to our room, somewhere around noon. Contractions picked up throughout the afternoon and by 4:15 I was in enough pain that I took my epidural. I had tried laughing gas and despised it, feeling like I wasn't in the room with my body. Once the epidural was in they began oxytocin, and they played with the dose, wanting my contractions to pick up strength, instead of just frequency, which is all that had been happening so far. I had a couple hours of painless epidural bliss, before one side of my body began to hurt horribly. During those hours they adjusted the monitors on my stomach, sure that Emma's heart rate monitor wasn't picking up correctly. When I'd have a contraction it would dip, but would bounce back quickly enough that they were sure it wasn't a concern. I was dilating, but she wouldn't move down, and things were taking much longer than they'd thought. They broke my water, and attached an electrode to Emma's head to accurately measure her heart rate. They ran another wire to measure the strength of my contractions, and also a catheter. I was starting to feel like a science experiment. I was wired everywhere, and could barely move without some serious organizational help. Meanwhile, my pain levels were skyrocketing and we kept being assured that the epidural should be working better than that, but they'd call the anesthesiologist back for me and he'd be there within the hour. They tried localized freezing which didn't help at all, and another drug they put through my IV that I found helped the resting period between contractions, but did little for the pain. They stopped oxytocin to wait until we could sort out my pain management. They did deduce that Emma was still face up, and that to work through contractions would encourage her to turn. The first sign I had that something wasn't right was all the nurses and my midwife leaving the room to chat. By then my contractions were coming too quickly to do anything but continually ask, "is Emma okay?"
The anaesthesiologist came back, fixed my epidural and watched me through a contraction or two. I felt better, so he left. Within the hour there was an incredibly painful spot on the same side, but at this point I was closing in on 10cm and there wasn't a lot that could be done, except the idea of my epidural suddenly being gone was frightening to me. I made it to ten, and was allowed to push through a very few contractions. It was very, very painful, and the OB mentioned that I'd really gotten screwed with my epidural. I agreed.
It felt to me like one second we were close, she was going to come, and it was going to feel awful but
she was about to be here. I felt every minute of the three years we've wanted her, tried to have her like a physical presence in the room. I cried again and again that, "I just need my baby" and everyone kept saying it would be soon, just keep trying. The next minute it felt like the doctor was making a face said something to the nurse and midwife and left the room. The nurse kept saying we'd prove him wrong, we'd have her before he got back, and that I needed to push hard, right now. I tried but it wasn't helping and suddenly the doctor was back, the overhead lights went on, the room filled with people and he explained that Emma wasn't turning, and couldn't descend, that every contraction was slowing her heart and she needed to be out, and now. He said he was going to try and turn her using forceps and I'd be allowed to try very briefly to push her out. If that wasn't successful, we needed a c-section. The room had been prepared and the team was waiting to rush me down the hall. Two nurses were putting leg braces onto the bed so high I didn't know how to get into the,and a table of very scary looking tools was rolled in. My anesthesiologist was there with consent forms I needed to sign for all these interventions and I couldn't pay attention with the contractions screaming through me, everything telling me to push, but my fear knowing I was slowing her heart dangerously every time I tried. I can't explain the fear, the utter panic and helplessness that those moments were, until suddenly I knew he was going to turn her and I closed my eyes and felt him push her backwards, and the sensation and horror of that pain is something that felt so completely wrong, so unnatural, that it was just indescribable. I knew she needed out, and I couldn't stop myself from pushing and screaming from the pain and the fear. I felt him turn her, and he said the cord was around her neck, and no wonder her heart slowed and she couldn't turn over. He freed it. He said he was going to pull her out on the next contraction and that I had to push and not to stop. It took only a few times, I think, and it felt like everything just stopped. I was so scared we were hurting her and somewhere in my mind every forceps horror story I'd ever heard played on a reel that I couldn't turn off. I couldn't look, didn't want to see what it was actually requiring to get her here until suddenly he told me to open my eyes, and I could see her head and little purple body following laying on the bed, and I heard her make a little sound and suddenly she was in my arms. I couldn't stop telling her I was so sorry, sorry I couldn't get her out, sorry we'd had to hurt her. They only let me hold her for a minute and then they took her away to check her and I heard her scream and Peter stayed with her and I held my mom and sobbed. I kept asking if she was okay, until after what felt like ages, they gave her back to me. I haven't really let go of her since. I can't yet. It's fine if people want to see her, and hold her for a bit, but in the end, I need her. I need her next to me.

She and I cried for a long time. Peter prayed for us both. She nursed, pulling away every so often to sob piteously. I joined her. Somehow he didn't hurt her too badly with the forceps and though it doesn't begin to matter to me, somehow I didn't tear at all. She has a dark bruise on the back of her head and a slight indentation, both of which should fade over the next few days. I'm in a good amount of pain but it fades when I see her, big black eyes and healthy pink skin, okay and sighing, making her little baby sounds. I don't know how we did it. It seems like something we conquered together, some little personal war we won. It's a shockingly violent way to have a baby, and they're so small and delicate and doesn't seem like it should work. The midwife told me later that out of the six OBs that could have been there, only three might have attempted it, and he is by far the best. She says it's something of an art and she'd have never suggested we do it with anyone but him. Somehow we got her here, and we are home. I just keep telling myself that it was just a bad day, even though it was the first. I get all the days from now on. She's going to be fine, I'm going to be fine. We get to go home and heal together and be a family. Everything about her feels hard won, from getting pregnant with her to getting her here, and I'm a little stunned by her, by what she can go through and by what she represents to us. I felt like Bella made us a family, and Emma completes us in a way that is incredibly beautiful and precious and fragile.

It's a part of her story, in the way that Children's Hospital is a part of Bella's story, but in the end, it's just one part. She has a future and a destiny and a purpose that I see when I look at her. She's a complete eternal being laying next to me in a pink blanket and I feel a little shell shocked, a little horrified, but mostly grateful. I'm beyond thankful that she's here, that she is what we spoke into existence when we named her Emma Camille. Whole and Perfect.


Focused

2.15.2014 12:13 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
I'm sitting at the pool right now, in an uncomfortable lawn chair that may or may not buckle under the weight of me and the child that fills me to near capacity. I couldn't find my swimsuit today (not that it would have fit) so I'm on the sidelines, watching Peter and Bella swim. My jeans are wet from the hug I just got, and she's blowing me kisses from across the pool.

There's a dog in here. Sitting patiently at the edge of the hot tub, which strikes me as strange. Then a man gets out of the hot tub, and I realize he's blind. Ah, of course. This strikes me as an incredibly stressful place to be without sight. It's so loud, and it's slippery.  It's really crowded today, and the lifeguards seem to have their hands full. There are not guard rails but the dog leads him confidently to the edge of the large pool. The man is heavily tattooed, big bushy red beard. He looks like a pirate, someone you may not want to encounter in a dark alley, but something about the dog leading him tentatively across the wet tiles makes him seem vulnerable. Again I try to imagine navigating a public pool blind, and feel anxious at the thought.

Then I see her. The man and his dog have made it to the edge of the large pool and a little girl who seems a little too old and too confident for the life jacket she's wearing runs up, the strap that's meant to go between her legs dragging behind her. The man passes the dog off to an older woman who, like me, is occupying a lawn chair. He takes hold of the little girls dangling strap, like a tail, and she leads him into the deeper pool. She's done this before, and seems totally confident with it just being the two of them.

And then they play. He is WILD with her, and I can't take my eyes off them. They're laughing and he's bumping into things, splashing people as they get too close. She leads him into the rushing river, where Bella doesn't like to go because the water moves too quickly, and  it's usually so crowded. Today, it's like cattle in a chute, all being pushed wildly in the same direction. He's trying to keep his stick between them but they're laughing too hard. She's trying to keep him from bumping into others but the water pushes them into the walls. The make it out of the river and back into deep water. He tosses her in the air, she continually whacks him in the head with a pool noodle because he can't see to duck. She couldn't care less that he's "disabled". She's not careful with him. She points things out to him and doesn't notice that he doesn't look because he is solely focused on her. She's just a little girl playing with her daddy, and she has his attention. Totally and completely.

I'm smiling and trying not to cry. I think of him not being able to see her, not knowing one day what her wedding dress looks like and for a moment I'm so sad for him. But then I think of the things I don't see. Things I allow myself to be blind to because I'm tired or lazy or distracted. I know his life has more challenges than mine, but as parenting is concerned, I don't see a disability. He's just a dad playing with his little girl, and from where I'm sitting he's doing better than I am, likely because he can't take her for granted in the same way I can with Bella. If they're playing, they're touching, connected. She has to tell him everything and he listens. I wonder what it would be like to spend a day like that with Bella, and I can't help but think that she'd probably love it. His little girl is having the time of her life.

Eventually they get out of the pool and suddenly he's tentative again. His steps less sure. I have no right to have spent my morning being so unashamedly interested. To have even begun to make a call on what his life must be like. To assume anything about him at all or apply some lesson to myself that I don't begin to earn.  His life has so much more purpose than to simply serve as an inspiration to my own. I want to tell him what an amazing dad he is, but I don't want him to think that I'm saying it because he's blind. Because he isn't. All I could see when I looked at them was his sight and my own disability.

Decisions, Decisions

2.05.2014 11:13 AM 11 2009 Melanie 1 comments
I think so far, the absolute hardest thing about parenting is making decisions for your kids. It's not the tantrums, or the sleepless nights. Sorry if you're a new mom and you're sure this is the hardest thing you'll ever do - it's not. Maybe some mom with teenagers will read this and say it's something else, and maybe she'd be right. But for me, it's this profound and crushing truth: I have to make concrete decisions for how I raise my child. She will live with the consequences of those decisions forever, for far longer than she will live in my house. They will shape and mold the person she is, the person she thinks she can be. And I've never done this before and have no idea what I'm doing. I think today's day and age make it so much harder. Every parenting decision you can think of is posted on some form of social media and debated with such intensity that if you try and do any research on the subject at hand, you'll be so confused and so sure you're about to screw everything up that you'll give up in five minutes, beat your head against a wall, slam your laptop shut and run screaming for a hot bath and a glass of wine. On the other hand, can you seriously make these decisions simply based on how you feel? That seems like a dangerous precedent to set. So I sigh, open my laptop, and try again. I ask people I trust and love, whose children I like and think are being raised well. And I try to trust my gut. Which I'm terrible at.

Emma is coming in a few short weeks, and we have to figure out Bella's first year of kindergarten at about the same time. These are the thoughts that go through my head:
"It's over. My time with my baby is over, and from now on a school gets the best hours of her day, five days a week. I'm going to miss her so, so much."
"Oh my gosh, how amazing will it be to have the best hours of my day back? Think of the alone time with Emma."
"Is she ready for this? Have I prepared her in any way for this?"
"Do I believe in my heart that any five year old is ready to spend 30+ hours of their week away from their family? I hate spending more than 20 and I'm an adult."
"Am I being a rebellious brat because I don't like the thought of public school? I had a crap experience, am I projecting that on her?"
"If we don't put her in public school, then the obvious answer is homeschooling. Do I want to homeschool? DEAR LORD I CAN'T HOMESCHOOL! I'm not smart enough, or trained enough to do it. And I'll have a new baby at home! No. Can't do it."

It's this, and a million other things. It's wondering if I send her to school full time if I'll lose her in some way. It's wondering if I homeschool her it will change our relationship and I'll lose her in some way. Most of it is wondering what she would benefit from the most. Who is she? How do you possibly know that about someone who is four years old? I don't believe that public school is right for every kid. I don't believe that homeschooling is right for every kid. So at the end of the day, who is Bella? What would work best for her? What's the best possible choice for her, right now? And I mean, right now. Registration for kindergarten starts in less than a month, at exactly the same time I should be in a hospital giving birth. Awesome.

I don't want to debate the merits of homeschooling over public schooling. I don't want to hear that I'm going to raise her to be a sociopath who will never leave my house if I homeschool, or the horror stories of what happened to your kid in public school. I've heard them. There's benefits and draw backs to both. I get it. But at the end of the day, I need to make a decision. Right now.

So in a couple of hours we are going to visit a classroom that's run by Regent Online Christian Academy. If we chose this path, Bella would go to school in a classroom for one half-day per week, would be able to be in a weekly lesson of some kind (she'd like to learn to swim) and the rest would be done by me, at home. The Ministry of Education would consider her enrolled at Regent, not technically a homeschooled student. They'd pay for it. I would be assigned a teacher to oversee her education and make sure she is meeting the marks that she should. This makes me feel calmer, because I like the idea of the responsibility being slightly lifted off my shoulders in that respect. I also feel calmer that at the end of the day, it's just kindergarten. If it doesn't work, then maybe next year we put her in school. I'm not ready to commit to saying that I'm going to do this until she's done high school, but the more Peter and I have talked about it, prayed about it, and talked about it again, the more we don't think we're going to enroll her in public school this year. I talked to Bella's preschool teacher about it the other day, and she said she thought it was an excellent choice for her, which surprised me. I also talked to a teacher friend in the public school system and she said the same thing. It's what she would choose for her kids. So we're going to see what we think, chat with the teacher and a few parents and take a look.

More than anything, I want to make the best decision for her. Not what society thinks is the best decision for all kids, not what I'm necessarily the most comfortable with. Honestly, I'm not ready for any of it. Both options scare the pants off me for different reasons. How did we get here already? I want her to be a baby again, where the best method of getting her to sleep was the biggest decision I made. Actually, that's a lie. This is still less terrifying than the medical decisions we made for her. And we did it and she's okay - and we were totally lost then, with nobody to ask because nobody we'd known had done anything like that before. And we did it. Maybe, like another friend says, I need to stop second guessing myself as her mom and trust myself a little more. All those parenting books tell you that you need to trust your instincts, and I have a really hard time doing that. I'm too honest with myself about my failings. I know that a lot of times, I'm not to be trusted. And maybe I need to embrace that I'm not always going to choose exactly right, and that's okay too. That she will still learn from my failings and shortcomings and that God is not beyond using those parts of me that I like least to do something great in her. I pray that he does, and that somehow he shapes me into being the kind of parent he saw in me when he placed her inside me what feels like a second ago. That would be enough for me.

Dear Emma,

1.07.2014 1:03 PM 11 2009 Melanie 1 comments
Hi sweet girl. As I type this, sitting in front of the fire, you are wiggling away inside me. I feel you always. Your twists and turns, your kicks and hiccups. I love how reassuring it is, to always know you're there, that you're growing and okay. I complain because it keeps me awake, and I sleep so little right now. Sometimes it hurts. My body, large as it looks to me, is quickly becoming too small to contain you. But in the end, I love knowing you're there. We waited for you and wanted a baby for so long.

On Christmas Eve, I turned over and didn't feel you wiggle. I praised God that you were actually still at 3am, and went back to sleep. By 4am, I woke up because you were so still. I did all the things that usually make you jump and squirm. I lay flat on my back until it hurt. I went to the bathroom. I drank a big glass of ice water. I pushed and poked at you from every side. I waited, and nothing. I don't think that I've gone 10 minutes without feeling you move in months, and suddenly the stillness was completely disconcerting. I wiggled so much that your daddy woke up and so we lay there in the dark, hands on my belly, trying not to worry about you. Because of how things went with your sister we have already been told to monitor your movements. If I feel you are being too quiet in there, I'm to proceed straight to the hospital. But it was early Christmas morning, and your sister was about to wake up to open presents. And you were fine. You had to be fine. I was overreacting. I do that, sometimes. Daddy and I prayed. I may have tried to go all Pentecostal on you; I whispered the verse, "in Him we live and MOVE and have our being" and commanded you to move. And still, nothing.

Just as I was starting to figure out what it would logistically look like to go in, you kicked. Daddy didn't feel it and I was afraid I'd imagined it. But then you kicked again and your Daddy took a deep breath and I burst into tears. And suddenly, I knew that we didn't just want a baby. I don't just want a sister for Bella. I want you. Emma Camille, created in the image of God, already a complete person, with a personality and a destiny and a calling. You don't exist in the moment I hold you. You have always existed. Your spirit has been known to God before you ever entered my womb. I don't know how that works, but it does. It comforts me.

Can I tell you something? I feel very guilty for how little I like being pregnant. It's our first moments together, these few months where it's just us, and I don't enjoy it. Somehow that feels like I'm rejecting you. I'm not. We wanted you, prayed for you, and longed for these exact symptoms for over two years. I knew I was taking risks having another baby, that in all likelihood it wouldn't be an easy or uncomplicated pregnancy. We are in the final stretch, and you've done very well. It's me, really. Some women just love being pregnant. It's like their bodies were designed to do nothing but bring life into the world. I hope you are like that. I am not. I throw up incessantly, and when that stops, then I have a few weeks of rest before my liver freaks out, which I've thankfully avoided thus far, or my pelvic bones slip out of place. This is a new one. I'm sitting here, happy that my Tylenol has taken the edge off, and am waiting for a call from a chiropractor. I'm not to go to work again until I've seen one. It hurts. It feels shockingly like the first couple days after having a baby. I won't tell you what that feels like, except that the only thing that makes it okay is the ability to finally snuggle your baby. I want to snuggle you. I cannot wait to hold you. I saw a photo of a new mom I know, and there was her baby snuggled on her chest with those gorgeous heated blankets they pile on you after you've delivered.  The longing to see your little face, to be the one under that pile of blankets, knowing it was all over, nearly crippled me (which is apparently an easy thing to do). I can't wait until that's us. I love you already, tiny girl. We can't wait to see you.

Love, Mama.

Defiant

11.09.2013 9:46 AM 11 2009 Melanie 1 comments
The other day we were enjoying a lazy weekend and watching the baby kick my stomach mercilessly. I'd never seen her so active, don't remember Bella being like this so early on in my pregnancy with her. Peter looked at my stomach and said, "hey, you in there. You are supposed to be our calm baby!"

Bella isn't calm. Almost ever. She's loud and assertive and determined and strong. She's a LOT like her mama. And there are many times when I look at her, knowing so well the weaknesses that come with our personality type, and wonder how I can teach her to overcome that, when in 30 years I still haven't done it myself.  Lately I've been focusing on the things that make Bella a really easy and wonderful child to parent, and that in itself, presents some challenges. 

I feel like strong children are very undervalued in society right now. What is so great exactly about being compliant and quiet? About sleeping through the night at six weeks old, (other than the obvious benefit to some poor wretchedly tired mother)? I understand that of course all personalities have their strengths and weaknesses but incredibly extroverted and determined people get a really bad rap sometimes. They don't learn to hide their less desirable qualities, they don't hide anything. So yes, my child has thrown an epic fit in a grocery store over a bag of Hawkins Cheezies (they're my favorite too). There are many times where I feel like I can't control her, like she runs the show and I stand behind her bewildered while the judging eyes of onlookers bore into my back. She's nearly impossible to manipulate, and trust me, I have tried. She has called my bluff so many times and at such an early age that it's embarrassing to admit it. I have felt like an awful parent many, many times. I feel it when I'm telling a coworker about some funny/exasperating thing she's done and their eyes get all wide and they say, "yikes. Have fun with that attitude in ten years." I've allowed that thinking to permeate my own. We will be locked in some battle at home over some seemingly tiny thing that so-and-so's child has done perfectly since birth and I will think it. "Right now you're three and I can't make you eat an apple slice. How will I tell you at 18 not to elope to Hong Kong with some badass gorgeous guy who deals heroin but somehow makes you feel beautiful and excited and alive?" 

Except I'm missing something very key here. She's impossible to manipulate. I pity the badass heroin dealer that tries to tell Bella to quit everything she's doing or has done and take off to some non-extradition country with him. Dude, I can't get her to eat an apple and I'm her mother. Have a good time with that. Go right ahead and try. Because guys like that prey on girls with low self esteem. They prey on girls that have been told that they are less, girls that feel misunderstood and alone. And that could be Bella, I could make her that way - if I refused now to embrace her very obvious strengths. If I chose to let those judging eyes make me wish I had an introvert instead. She has been strong and vocal and occasionally defiant since birth. I won't change her. I can't. 

So I've been trying a couple of different things with her lately and I've been stunned at her response. Mealtime has been a fight with Bella and I since I stopped nursing. I have cried, begged, yelled, threatened, and attempted to starve her out. Nothing works. Nothing. So after reading that "strong-willed children do better when presented with choices" I've been trying that. I lay out two options and their subsequent consequences and tell her to make a choice. I'm shocked at the consistency that she will choose the better thing, when given the choice. But again, no manipulation allowed. If I say she's allowed to choose not to eat her veggies, she legitimately has to be able to decide that without me freaking out, trying to convince her of what's better. She's tested me on it. But when she does, I'm shocked at the maturity she can show at dealing with the consequences of her decision, and how quickly she will admit to being wrong. Obviously that can't be done with everything. Sometimes she just has to listen to me, and those times can still be hard. She is still only 4. However, I'm learning that it gets worse when I try and change her. She makes choices based on their value to her. She doesn't make choices because I told her to do it and I'm her mom. She simply isn't compliant. But she is confident. And for me, the idea of teaching her value isn't half as intimidating as trying to make her blindly listen to me. Her obedience simply because I'm her mother would make me feel pretty good about myself. It'd be a nice ego boost. But watching her choose something better makes me proud of HER. And she's learning to trust that seemingly innate confidence in herself (that I'm sometimes so envious of). I love watching her become herself. 

I love that she communicates with us. That she tells me if I've made her angry (and boy will she tell me!) What if she didn't say it? What if she hid that hurt and frustration, what if I didn't know she was stewing inside because her desire to be "good" made her ashamed to vent her own hurt and frustration to me? Or worse, I had taught her early on that being quiet was better even if it wasn't honest than being loud in the grocery store? What if I had somehow succeeded in making her value my often selfish desires for an "easy" child to the point that she no longer felt sure of herself? Then what happens when the badass guy comes to my door to pick her up? Who does she pick? Because let's face it, that guy is coming. I met him. Every girl I know has encountered him in some form or another. 

I believe that we were "created before the foundations of the world." I believe that she was chosen by God for Peter and I. I believe that her little personality was known to God before she ever even existed in my womb. I believe that she bears His image, even while laying immobile in the snack aisle, sobbing about Cheezies. I think she's amazing and smart and that very little of that has anything to do with me. I think that she's going to grow up to be something amazing. I don't have to create that in her. I do have to teach her to trust the good parts of herself, which means I have to see them, celebrate them, and call them out. And if all that you can see when you look at her is a kid who can be defiant, someone who didn't sleep through the night or eat fruit, you have missed it. If all you can see is that she's noisy then you're not really listening. She's exactly who she's supposed to be, and while that looks messy, and like less sleep, and a lot of other inconveniences, I am proud of her. I wouldn't change her for anything in the world. 

Sweet Bella,

9.06.2013 4:11 PM 11 2009 Melanie 1 comments
A couple weeks ago you turned four. Four. I know that I say all the time how fast time is passing, and that's true. It's going much, much too quickly for me. A while ago your daddy and I took you for a walk and once again, you were too far ahead, running all over the place and your daddy looked at me and said, "it's always going to feel this way isn't it? Like she's too fast, too far ahead, like we can't keep up with her." It does. It always feels that way. It's such a confusing mixture of feeling like you've always been here and like you just arrived. We're running behind you, watching you do and become all these things that you're just doing (so confidently!) and Daddy and I are wondering how we got here. 
The last three months you've hit some pretty big milestones. You had your first laser surgery on your birthmark on June 11. You did so great. Your mama was a bit of a wreck. You're incredibly brave. Not just with something big and scary like a surgery, but in everything you put your mind to. You're so certain that you can do anything you try if you try hard enough, and I don't know how to protect you while keeping that part of you perfect and confident. 
On July 6th, we told you that you were becoming a big sister. You weren't surprised at all (Daddy and I were!) because you'd told Jesus that you wanted twin babies and you said that Jesus told you they'd be here just after Valentine's day. You're absolutely right. I'm due March 10th, and you're so happy. I have been a terrible mama since then. So tired, and so very sick, and you have endless patience for me. You give me your "pokes", the significance of which is not something I'd dream of taking for granted, and you always want to know how I'm feeling, if your baby (it's only one, thank goodness) is okay, and if I need anything. You want to know all sorts of things about how the baby grows, what it eats, when you can hold it. You got to come to the ultrasound a few weeks ago and "your" baby waved to you and you bounced up and down on my legs, so excited. You're going to be the very best big sister, I just know it. I'm a little scared of things being different after it being us for so long, but I love the idea of you having a brother or sister. It just makes me so happy for you, for all of us. 
The other big thing you've done is start preschool. I always said I'd home school you, and maybe I still will, but I've always believed in parenting a child the way they need to be parented, and not necessarily the way you WANT to parent. Does that make sense? I don't like sending you to school. I can say that now because you won't read this for a long time, but it makes me feel a little sick, to drop you off with a virtual stranger and drive away. Me and your daddy didn't do very well with it that first day. But you LOVE it and I knew in my heart that it was something you wanted. You need a really close friend, and that's something I can't produce for you at home. Nor will I have a large lizard in a tank like your classroom does, so I'll admit to there being benefits to it. I know you're going to do so well at preschool, that you're going to learn a lot and make good friends, which makes me happy. I love to see you doing something new. It makes me think of that line in the book I made you for your second Christmas, "I love how any time or place, you're up for anything." You have your Daddy's spirit of adventure, and you both cause me some sleeplessness but I wouldn't change either of you for the world. I want to let you do and be everything that you want, and not ever to let my fear or worry stop you from experiencing something wonderful. 
Goodness, I love you. So, so much. You still sleep in my bed, and while it's the place that our arguments usually occur, "Bella, stop jumping, stop singing, it's 11pm, stop grabbing my face and hair and go. to. sleep!" I admit that I love to see you fast asleep on the pillow next to me, and I'm always a little relieved when Daddy shows up in the middle of the night and takes your kicking, squirming body off to your bed. Even when you're asleep you're moving, active, and busy. I don't know where I'm going to put you when the baby arrives. 
We took you canoeing a week or so ago, on a camping trip. You and daddy were exploring this little island we found and I thought it would be fun to row around the side and surprise you. I was doing fine, rowing exactly where I needed to go. I started to think that this wasn't so hard, and I came around the side of the island that had been blocking the wind and got blown backwards. Hard and fast. No matter how hard I paddled, I couldn't go forward. I drifted backwards until I could row into the shelter of the island again and circle back, but it didn't matter how many times I tried to get to you, as soon as I left the shelter of the island the wind and the current carried me away. Eventually you and Daddy hiked back to me, bobbing uselessly in the water. It worked much better once Daddy was in the canoe. (There's a life lesson there, surely.)You bravely mounted the front of the boat like a little mermaid, hair streaming in the wind and whatever song you were making up floating back to Daddy and I on the breeze as he paddled us home. It was one of those really perfect moments, where everything feels exactly right, even though just moments ago, I'd been afraid and frustrated.
Sometimes you feel like that. Sometimes you're so easy to parent, it's easy to see myself in you and know what you're thinking or what you'll do next, and other times it feels like you're the wind. Like you're a current carrying me away and I'm thinking, "Wait, where are we going? I thought I'd do this differently." You feel like an individual, and you surprise me constantly. I wonder if all mama's struggle with that. You grew inside my body, it's hard not to think of you like an extension of myself. But you're not me and as every month passes it's easier to see you working your own little personality out. It's the most beautiful and terrifying things to watch. I'm endlessly proud of who you are. I love your courage and confidence, I adore your sensitivity and logic, I love your passion for learning and your consideration of everyone around you. I love the person that you are. I love the totally hilarious things you say and do, and the way you pray. You're such an amazing person, and I'm not just insanely blessed to be your mama. I'm proud to just know you. You're the best thing that's ever happened to me, and I will love you like crazy for forever and ever. 
Mama.

Tuesday

6.06.2013 8:09 PM 11 2009 Melanie 2 comments
Hi Bella,

I find myself wanting to talk to you tonight, probably in a way you're not ready for right now. You're so little, and so big, and I'm so lost in all of it. It feels like I've always had you, like there's never been a part of my life when you didn't exist. Sometimes it feels like you're new. Like we just got you home from the hospital a minute ago, and I went to take a long shower and came out and you're three and a half. You really are everything to me, in a way that sometimes even I don't understand, and it's hard to feel what I'm feeling right now and not be able to talk to you about it. Because it's you. It's your story too.

Those two days at Children's Hospital when you were so small feel very, very close to me this week. I remember every second of it. Everything I loved was at stake, and I was drowning. Half of your little face wasn't moving, they said your brain had been compromised. The told me you could have serious seizures your whole life. They were worried about your spine (something I haven't really thought of since that week, and find myself thinking of now), they were worried about your face, then they were worried about your heart. That was the minute I was kicked in the stomach. I remember stumbling down the hall to Cardiology, tears pouring down my face and thinking that the saying, "God won't give you more than you can handle" was total and complete garbage. I'd seen the haunted eyes of a cancer mom earlier that day as her nine year old went in for her third lumbar puncture, a very painful procedure. Her daughter was brave, but that woman looked like she'd been physically beaten. I refuse to say that saying to this day. I don't believe it. Unfortunately we don't live in that world, the one where God is totally in control. We took that control in Eden, and now we live here. Where people get sick, even good people. Where little kids don't leave Children's hospital and their parents stagger home, trying to figure out how to possibly keep breathing.

It's not that I don't know you're okay, not that I'm not more thankful than I can express. The day we carried you out of the hospital into the afternoon sun is what I imagine winning the lottery would feel like. You were going to live, and be totally normal. We've been back and forth to that hospital many times between that day and this one, and you've always done just fine. You're fine. But Tuesday is your first surgery. And that's going to be a hard day for me. I don't want to go back into those rooms. The same pre-op room where I saw that cancer mom, heard her daughter tell the doctor that it was okay, he didn't have to tell her how much it would hurt. She knew. The waiting room where they misquoted me how long your MRI would take and after almost three times the wait I'd been told to expect, we calmly asked to be taken to you immediately, or given a sedative. By that point I was shaking uncontrollably, still not used to you being out of my body, let alone out of my arms.  I don't want to go into the recovery room. Where I had to go find you by myself, last bed on the left, hooked up to all those wires. I could live to be a million years old and never forget for a second what you looked like in that bed, and how it felt to see you like that, and wonder how many more times I would have to see you like that. I know it's stupid, but I'm worried about how you'll look when you're done. It bruises horribly - I've Googled photos. For a week or two it's going to look like you were badly burned or beaten. It will look like a step backwards which is frustrating. When the bruises fade, we'll be able to see how successful the surgery was. I'd feel better if I could go into that room and see you with your mark almost gone, and know that it was so worth it. But it's going to look much worse, and then it will look better.

I know you're okay. I do. It's an incredibly quick surgery, done by a very skilled doctor, in the best possible hospital. You don't even have to spend the night. But I'd like to take a moment and tell you, even if you can't read it yet, that I'm sorry about the IV, that it'll hurt. I'm sorry that we live in a world where we have to do the surgery at all. A world where some people will only see the mark on your face, instead of the incredible person you are. I want you to know that Daddy and I don't see it. We just don't. But we'd like to have it done before you remember it too clearly. As clearly as I remember that first visit. I want this whole experience to get so muddled in your brain, so crowded out by great memories, that one day you look at baby photos of yourself and have to ask us what the mark on your face is.

I love you honey. So much. And the anticipation of the surgery is going to be the worst part. After that, it'll be fine, and you'll be fine. The surgeries after that (they say three or four) will be slightly easier because I'll know what to expect. This time I don't, and I'm a little afraid too. But we will get through it together. And you're excited because we're going to stay at a hotel with a swimming pool and go for a hot tub the night before. Because you're awesome like that. You know about the IV, about everything that will happen, and you're excited for swimming.

Sweet Bella, when I grow up, I want to be just like you.

Mama.

"The Only Army That Shoots Their Wounded"

5.15.2013 6:27 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
People used to say that about Christians. They were wrong. And right. "Mothers are the meanest group of people in the world" I believe I posted to Facebook not long ago. I took it down almost immediately, thanks to a friend who said that it was a pretty awful generalization and Facebook wasn't the place for it. She was right. I was wrong. And I was right.

I'll preface this with saying that I know some amazing mothers. I come from a good line of them. I have some amazing friends that are wonderful mothers. The other day at a restaurant, I met a waitress who was a single mom, and she spoke glowingly about her daughter. She loved being a mom, and was so nauseatingly in love with her little girl that she couldn't see straight. She found Bella a book in her purse or her car that her daughter had outgrown and gave it to her. It was the first time I as a customer had been "tipped" by a waitress, and I was touched. A total stranger. It made my day. I may have spoken to her manager, called the restaurants head office and spoken to them, saying she needs a raise. I've always been a little overboard that way.


When I was a girl, our whole extended family used to vacation at the lake together. We'd take up a bunch of campsites, the kids slept all over the place, and in the afternoons we'd all meet at the beach. I have a lot of uncles, and a couple of them had boats. Tubing behind a boat with my uncles are some of the best and most terrifying memories of my childhood. I can picture myself back there, sitting in some plastic contraption holding a nylon handle, bobbing quietly in the water and watching my uncles in the boat up ahead in the calm before they'd hit the throttle. Knowing I wanted a ride, wishing against all logic that they'd tow me nicely around the lake at a reasonable speed. Watching to see which one of them was taking the wheel. I never got that nice pull around the lake. It was always a million miles an hour, until I either hit a wave and careened wildly into the air or I got tired and simply couldn't hold on any longer. I don't remember a single trip that ended without a wipe out. That was the point.  


Motherhood feels like that to me. Sitting in the tube, feeling totally powerless and about to be taken on an exhilarating and frightening ride, knowing that I went ahead and got myself into this mess and wondering why. Partly loving it and partly wanting to sob in fright. I think a lot of us feel like that. When women are honest and vulnerable with each other I feel like we are built for such amazing relationships. We connect in such an beautiful way. And if we all feel this way, why don't we rally together, instead of being mean and judgmental and awful? But mom's really are mean. 


I'm on a fun shopping day with my sister and our kids. When we're ready to leave our favorite kids store, adorable purchases in tow, Bella decides to "assert her independence". She says she's taking an entire rack of leggings and when I tell her to put it back she says no. When I tell her she can't talk to me like that she pulls something she's never done in her life and raises her little fist and pops me on the chin three times. Bop bop bop. In front of the sales lady. I'm first of all startled, then angry,  then embarrassed, then lost. What do you do for a consequence? I nearly told her we weren't going to feed the seals at the park, but that's not fair to her cousin who is behaving. I grab her hand and drag her to the bathroom. Which is MILES away. She's barely keeping up with me, and knows I'm incredibly upset, and is screaming her head off. I can't get upset here, not with everyone around, besides, I don't know what I'll say. She's never hit me. I'm desperate for a place to be alone with her, to be able to parent without judgmental eyes and ears. We make it to the bathrooms, and have to wait for a handicapped bathroom because Lord knows I can't go into the stalls. As we're standing there a total stranger comes up to my and my screaming child and says, "Oh! Is that how we always get what we want?"


When talking to people about Bella's health issues in the beginning I've often laughed and said, "We're hoping she's an easy teenager, since she's used up all our stress reserves." Most people laugh a snide sounding laugh and roll their eyes and say, "Yeah, good luck with that." REALLY?! C'mon people. I'm aware that one has nothing to do with the other. When I talk to other moms about the day to day struggles of meal times, or spending less time in front of the TV, or all the stuff that comes with having a three year old, I get told ALL THE TIME, "Have fun when she's 13." Often by moms who don't have teenagers, who never have. 


I get told that I'm lucky I only have one. If I had four then I'd be able to talk. Sure, that would be more stress, but Bella would have a playmate other than myself, and the ability to grow up with a sibling (something Peter and I loved). And could we also take a second and be super honest about that? Bella doesn't have a sibling NOT because we wouldn't have LOVED for her to have a sibling. So shut the hell up. 


In what scenario is it okay to tell someone who is struggling, frightened, and overwhelmed that they're screwed either way? Or that, "you think it's hard now? You've seen NOTHING. Things are about to really, really suck." That's a mean thing to say! And I hear it LOTS. And lets say for arguments sake, that they're right. It's still awful. Maybe more so. 


So let me take one second and be super honest, and really vulnerable. It's hurtful. It makes me feel little, and stupid, and like I'm never ever going to be a good mom. It makes me feel like it's not okay to struggle. It makes me feel so isolated in all this. 


To the mom who glared at me because Bella watched Netflix on our walk - screw you. I'm in desperate need of losing 40 pounds which is one more exhausting thing on my list of crap to do. My kid can't walk because she can't lose weight or I'm going to have to add a nutritionist to our list of doctors and I don't want to. I'm trying to keep her awake so that she gets a good night sleep before we head to our cardiologist appointment tomorrow. Which I'm sure will probably go fine, but I'm allowed to be a little stressed out about without some other mom saying, "At least she doesn't have cancer." 


There's the moms who think I'm an elitist snob and that my daughter is going to be an unsocialized awkward idiot with a below par education if I home school her.(I feel vindicated that unsocialized is not a word) To them? MIND YOUR OWN BUSINESS. I don't think you're a terrible parent for choosing public education for your child, do me the service of reserving your judgment of me. And also? I am unbelievably scared to home school her. But I want it to be me who teaches her to read. I want to be there for those moments when she figures something out. I want to be able to explain things to her, and learn with her. I realize I'm probably getting in way over my head, and I really don't need to hear it from someone else, usually someone who knows us not at all.


To the mom who wrote the condescending post about the mom in the park with her iPhone who was missing her children's childhoods, I ask, "Who was watching your kids while you were judging every minuscule detail about her?" And to every mom who forwarded it all over the Internet so I saw it at least four times - way to go. Way to forward a mean message about a mom who was likely simply catching a few minutes of "me time" while her kids were happily playing at the park. I've done it. I did it today. I still pushed her on the swing, we still had fun.


I'm not saying I've never stood in judgment, and that I'm not so sorry about that. We've all done it a time or two. But goodness sake, could we maybe tell each other just a little, "Hey, you're a good mom. That's a sweet kid you have there, you must be proud of yourself" Don't be surprised if you say it and some mom breaks down crying in relief. Don't we all feel like we're screwing it up? My goodness, lets throw each other a rope instead of looking at each other drowning and saying, "Wow - you think you can't swim there? The waves are about to get way worse." And then walking smugly away. WHY do people do that? I just don't get it. 


The problem is, it's mostly strangers who do it. Nobody who reads this post is going to be the mom I'm talking about (though I wish the judgy one with the viral post would). So my mission for this week, is to find one of those people - a stranger or a distance acquaintance and tell her she's doing a great job as a mom. I'll tell you how it goes. Someone's gotta freaking say it, and I'm sure not hearing it. Let's have that go viral. 


You are doing a good job, even on the days you're not. Even on the days when you glance at your phone too often, or sit your kid in a cooling bath to write a blog for an hour just so you can get your feelings out. It's not like there's anyone to talk to. I'm here alone almost every afternoon and evening. I'd appreciate (without an ounce of sarcasm), would really REALLY appreciate, being able to go on my walk without the "You're a crap mom" glare. Because it matters to me. More than it should, more than I'd normally ever want to admit. It matters.

I'm Still Me.

2.20.2013 6:59 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
You never see yourself doing it, not at the time. When you're young and single, or worse, young and in love, you don't see it. You think you know what you're getting into. 
"Of course there'll be hard times," you tell yourself. "I don't think everything will be perfect." (You do, actually. Think it'll be perfect. You do.) 
You stand at an alter in a white dress and you're so filled with love that even tears aren't enough, and you dream a beautiful, perfect dream. You promise, "for better or worse" and you mean it. And like almost everything in life, you haven't the slightest idea what you're doing. 
Don't get me wrong, you should do it. Even if you don't know, probably because you don't know, you should do it. Get married. Have a baby. Even if you're so full of hope and promise that you're nauseating to talk to, you should do it. It's a good thing. And there's no preparing. You think you'll be different when those times come. You will not be the 22 year old you, you'll be a wife, or a mother. Those words hold a lot more mysticism than they really should, maybe more so if you're a sweet, naive, Christian girl. Somehow, even though we don't believe we do, we are so sure that that ceremony, or that moment when they lay a child in your arms, will change everything. And it does, in a way. But not in the way you think when you're the nauseating 22 year old in a white dress.  In a lot of ways, it changes not one thing. Because at the end of the day, I'm still me. 
I'm standing in the kitchen, three pots bubbling on the stove, a crockpot in the corner, a burn on my hand from pulling muffins out of the oven without a mitt, the dog underfoot, while Bella says, "Mama, I stepped in dog pee and I can't get my socks off." I wait for the part of my brain that's a mom to kick in. Do something. Know what to do! You had a baby, you're a mom. I was there, it was gross and awful and amazing and beautiful. It happened. You had that baby over there, the one with pee on her socks. Deal with this. And for a moment I feel like I'm being electrocuted, just a little. Something in my brain short-circuits because I've never dealt with this. I want to help her but I need to deal with those damn muffins. I want to deal with my burning dinner but my kid has pee on her socks. I really want to kill the dog but Bella will cry, and my neighbors will call the cops if I drag her furry dead body out of my house for peeing on my floor for the hundredth time. Wait, dinner. Turn the oven off. Bella, don't run through the kitchen with pee on your socks! Sit down. Muffins, where are my muffins and why don't I have oven mitts any more?! 
And it's like that. Over and over and over again. A totally new situation that I don't know how to deal with. The other day Bella genuinely asked me, without malice, why she had to listen to me. I just blinked at her. I don't know why we should listen to me. Because I won't forget to make dinner because I'm playing dolls? Because I pay the bills? I was stumped for a minute. Then I made a stupid speech about authority that she processed exactly none of and we moved on. 
I'm flying so blind and, even though it's embarrassing to say, I thought I'd have it so much more figured out than I do. I really did think that. 
We've done the "for better and worse." Both. I'd promise them again, knowing what I do. I'd never go back. But the day to day stuff is totally and completely draining. And I keep thinking that I should know how to do it. The good stuff is so freaking great that even at 22 in a white dress, I could never have pictured the perfection of it. The hard stuff is so awful that you want to find that 22 year old and smack the promise and hope right off her stupid face. And the day to day grind of it is endless. I have somehow lost my identity in exactly the place in life where I thought I'd find it. And not in a depressing, awful, way, but just in a way that makes it impossible to be who I was at 22. Which would be fine, if when that girl left the inside of my head the woman who is a wife and mother arrived. Some identity that would make me different inside, and really great at this.  I feel bewildered. Not sad. Not regretful, not even unhappy. Just a little stunned that my mother must have done this too. Women everywhere must just figure it out as they go. And I know, I KNOW, it was stupid and naive, but I really did think that somehow you'd just know how to do it. 
I respect women in a totally different way. Moms are freaking amazing, and you should go hug yours. Or do her dishes. Or, for the love of all that is good in the world, buy her a bottle of wine and run her a bath. 

Dear Bella,

9.07.2012 9:20 PM 11 2009 Melanie 0 comments
You are three. Dear God, how on earth did you become three? I'm sure every one of these letters will begin this way, with my stunning realization that the reason fourteen million women told me while I'd wander unassumingly through the grocery store, bouncing you on my hip that first year, "enjoy this. They grow so quickly." is because you grow SO quickly. I refuse to be one of those women who say it though. Besides, who would believe me? A woman with her first child will never understand how quickly it happens, and a woman with her second doesn't need to hear it. 

In honor of this incredible milestone, we bought you a dog. He's a little Yorkshire Terrier who you promptly named Henry. He didn't like you for the first month or so, but lately, I wake up to find him curled up on the end of your bed, and it makes me smile. You love him to pieces, and sobbed when your Nana and Papa came to take him for the day of your birthday because we were going to be gone the entire day. You love to hug him and boss him around endlessly.

How do I describe you right now? You are funny. You are imaginative and smart, you are determined and confident. You love to cuddle, and to make me laugh. You love to dance, and even though all babies go through their little dancing phase, I'm glad you've never grown out of yours. I enrolled you in your first ballet class a couple of weeks ago. You start in a few weeks, and that makes my chest tight, makes the air fly from my lungs as I realize you're old enough to do things like this. Take a class at the community center. Climb the monkey bars at the park, memorize a bible verse - so far you know three! Everyone is asking when I'm enrolling you in preschool and the short answer is I'm not. I can't yet, not this year. Surely you're too small for me to take somewhere and drop off with complete strangers and drive away. To me it sounds as plausible as enlisting you in the army, but then I've always been a little dramatic that way. Besides, with your daddy's and my schedules right now, neither of us is willing to allow those strangers time with you that we still want for ourselves. Maybe next year. Maybe we'll keep up the ballet thing and give you your social interaction that way. I'm learning to let myself parent you in a way that I'm comfortable with, even if it's different sometimes then what is normal right now. 

You're a hard child to parent, do you know that? I'll tell you now, since you wont read this for many years, but you scare me to death sometimes. You're so completely confident in everything you do, and I'm so NOT like that. I worry about all those moms that ask me what preschool you're going to. The other day at the park I was asked twice and I was so nervous about answering. When a little girl ran up to you and asked what preschool you went to you happily told her you didn't go to preschool. When she didn't understand and persisted, listing preschool names like the Yellow Pages, you said flatly, "I told you already. I. Don't. Go. To. Preschool." You offended her, which made me smile guiltily, and she ran off and it didn't phase you one bit. You ran off to go down the slide and play. If I'd had an altercation like that it would have caused me severe stress. I'd have needed to come home and talk to your daddy about how unsure I feel sometimes, how strange around other moms. You just ran off to play. I find it hard some days to parent a child I want to be like. You're so completely comfortable in your own skin and I so often feel at odds with mine. In this way, I hope you never become like me, and I hope I learn to become more and more like you. I've learned so much from you already, and that's a strange and wonderful thing for me.

You've managed to find a totally adorable balance between being that independent, that devil-may-care, and being so completely loving. You hug for no reason, you ask me how I'm doing, if I'm happy, and what kind of things I like. Your daddy works most evenings and we almost always go to bed together. We get on our jammies and either grab our respective books, or our respective iPods (those imaginary moms are shaking their heads again) and we snuggle. Every night. You still drink "milkniceandwarm" every night, and again, it's a habit that you're probably too old for that I can't seem to ask you to give up, because it's cute, and you love it, and lets face it, you're not the best eater, and I figure the extra calories are good for you. 

I kid you not, while I was typing this you just waged war on bath time - something you LOVE by the way. You climbed out for the first time ever (you're short, if nobody has told you yet) and ran shrieking, naked, into the living room and I, laughing, followed and tossed you back in the bath with your sixteen toys. And then suddenly you were mad, and refused to get back in. I find so much of parenting like this. One minute we're enjoying things, laughing, and then the next you're asserting some dormant bit of your personality. "Look, I've never been tall enough to decide when my bath is over, so move over woman. I'm done." I was bewildered and told you you had to get back in so we could wash your hair. You said you were done. You're not rebellious, or bratty, which would be easier. You're logical. I finally threatened something overly dramatic, sure you'd pick the bath you love over something you hate and you called my bluff. Said you'd pick anything but the bath, and then you burst into tears. And there I am. Stuck, and so obviously flying so blind that even a three year old can call me out on it. Eventually, I agreed with you, said you could have the awful thing you'd hate instead of the bath, but in a mad stroke of last ditch effort, I explained about good choices and bad choices. I was sure it was way over your head but now I was cornered, about to carry out some ridiculous punishment I had no intention of ever doing. You looked at me, standing naked in the kitchen, big tears on your beautiful little face and said, "so taking a bath is the good choice?" and I was startled as I realized you got it, this weird spur of the moment lecture about making good decisions, the kind that moms give their adolescent daughters the first time they go to the mall alone with their friends. 

You climbed back in on your own, resigned that the bath was the better thing to do, even if you didn't like it, and I told you I was proud of you. And then accidentally dunked you "under the sea" and made you cough and sputter and burst into tears anew, and this time I could have kicked myself for my awful timing and I wrapped you in a towel, and cuddled you hard. In a moment you asked me to hold you "like a tiny baby" up to the mirror and ask "whose pretty little girl is that?" (something I've done since the day you were born) so I did and you giggled and I thanked God that your memory is so short, that you forgive and forget nearly instantly and so generously. 

You're a really, really good little girl. We're still just as crazy about you as we were the day we had you, more crazy even. I'm going to go throw you in your jammies and toss you into bed and tell you a "Princess Bella Story" and fall asleep snuggled into you, as you kick my blankets everywhere and I smell your soft curls. 

Beautiful darling little one, your Mama loves you so incredibly that it leaves me breathless, makes me crazy, and is the most powerful, overwhelming feeling. You are amazing to me in every way, and I can't imagine a life without your laughter and cuddles. 
"I love you much"
Mama.

Attached

4.27.2012 12:55 AM 11 2009 Melanie 1 comments
(Wow. It's been so long since I've written that they've changed the layout of Bloggers dashboard and I don't know my way around anymore. When did this happen?)


I've been thinking about parenting lately. I have a smart, smart little girl. One who picks up on everything I'm saying and doing and at some point recently, it's occurred to me in a big way that I am raising this child. I know that seems like an obvious conclusion to come to, and parents will understand more easily what I mean. Let me explain this way: I knew I wanted to have Bella. I don't think it really occurred to me that SHE'D have ME. I've been thinking of intentional parenting, about not being so reactive. I saw a Pinterest sign that said that having a toddler is like having a blender going in your house with the lid off. Some days it's like that, and I rush all over the place wiping up frantically even as the mess occurs. On those days, I say no too often. I become impatient. I long for naptime, or a shift at the credit union. On those days, I feel like the worst of mothers. I put her to bed and want to just lay down and cry. And then it hits me. I didn't just have a child. I became someone's mother. And I suck at it. Poor kid. 


So I've decided I'm going to be better. Do better. I'm going to raise my voice less. Practice taking deep breaths. And read. Being a mom is something I want to be amazing at. Surely there's a book or two that could help. Oh wait. There's four hundred and seventy three million parenting books. "How to get your baby to _______" is a pretty popular title. But that's not my question. I don't want to get her to do something, or not do something...wait. This is a lie. I want her to poop on the potty consistently. But I digress.


It's amazing to me that the vast majority of parenting books I've found are focused on the child's behavior. It starts with sleeping through the night, and goes on from there. I have books on how to disguise vegetables in chocolate and how not to have your daughter become a tramp by age 12. All good stuff. I'd like her to eat veggies. I'd like her to maintain her modesty and dignity. Not many of them answer the question, "how do I be a good mother to my child?" There are some, but again, the answers are so contradictory it's difficult to know where to start.


Someone great gave me amazing parenting advice once, when I was being badgered to read a certain book that I disagree with pretty profoundly. Someone was saying it was the ONLY way to parent and had an amazing success rate. Anyway, I didn't want to offend by saying that I thought it was a load of hooey, even if it did work, but at the same time would rather have spent my fifteen bucks on almost anything else. Like a new novel to read at three in the morning while I nursed on demand (insert sad head shake here). Anyway, this great person (we'll call her Schmecky) told me, "It can be good advice and still be terrible advice for you. Every baby is different, but every mom is different too. You have to parent in a way that's true to who you are. If this amazing trick gets your baby to sleep through the night but you simply don't have the personality type to do it, then it's not good advice. Even if it works." (It should be noted that this is massively paraphrased.) 


I've been thinking about that a lot. Parenting in a way that's true to who God made me to be, while still asking him to file down those rough edges. (Someone get the Man a big file - stat) I've been reading, researching, trying to find something that fits. Some sort of a starting point so I can weed through the literature and find something I'd want to read from start to finish. Enter The Hippie Housewife, and the term Attachment Parenting. I'd never heard it before last week, but it's a lot of things that I've always felt about parenting on a wide variety of topics, that happily fit under a heading. Which is nice and organized for me. And helps with my Google search for good books.


-I don't let Bella cry it out. Not ever. Not even now. I won't do it. If she cries. I come. I'll do it until she moves out. 
-I breastfed for 16 months and LOVED it. On demand. And for a baby on steroids, I can't begin to tell you what that meant for me. Sometimes every twenty minutes for HOURS on end. Days on end. I spent our first Christmas vacation in bed with my top off because there was just no point. She ate. I read the entire Twilight saga, to my discredit.
-I co sleep (GASP!) I get the most comments about this one. I probably will co-sleep until either a:Peter gets better hours, or b:Bella tells me she's over it. And if Peter gets better hours, then I don't know what. Both Bella and I LOVE going to sleep together. And if you're about to argue that she'll never sleep in her own bed and Peter and I will never have sex again, you are wrong. She sleeps in her crib whenever I ask her to with no fuss. We love it. It's not for everyone, and our work situation certainly lends itself to it, but for us? It's the best part of my day.


What makes me happy is that Attachment Parenting is not about raising brats. It's not about children who learn that Mama says yes whenever they ask. Anyone who knows me knows I have some pretty strict boundaries with Bella. Probably too many, simply because she understands far too well. This is about acknowledging that I am the adult. I chose to have you, not the other way around. It's about questioning my motives. WHY do people obsess about sleeping through the night? It's not like I don't get the sleep deprivation thing, I do. (Seriously...Every. Twenty. Minutes.) But this is about asking myself if I am reacting to Bella out of love or selfishness. Do I put her first? God tells us that we should put others above ourselves, that we should serve them with love. He doesn't ask us to be doormats, but to be intentional in the way that we love and serve others. I think others includes my daughter. I teach her to respect me when I say no, because I am part of the foundation of how she will relate to God (oh my goodness) and I want her to be obedient to him. But I don't teach her to respect me because I'm embarrassed that she's defying my authority in the grocery store lineup and the perfect mom behind me is drilling holes into the back of my head with her judge-y eyes. (Oh - she shops at your grocery store too? Small world.) This is about my mindset. It's about where my head is at. It is about living in a way that is intentional, instead of in a way that is purely reactive. I suck at it on a pretty impressive level, if you were wondering. But I'd really, really like to learn. What's more important than this?