Even on Indian summer days like today - when windows are thrown open and bare feet once again tramp the ground - a small sadness at the passing of such transitory beauty fills me. The scenery changes a little each day, some days feels gradual, others striking. But the awareness of the closing of yet another season is near. That awareness the constant change brings makes it easier to notice surroundings and stop to dwell in the moment, count blessings, and breathe deep. The golden tinged sadness of time's passage.
Friday, November 6, 2015
The Reds and Yellows of Time's Passing
Even on Indian summer days like today - when windows are thrown open and bare feet once again tramp the ground - a small sadness at the passing of such transitory beauty fills me. The scenery changes a little each day, some days feels gradual, others striking. But the awareness of the closing of yet another season is near. That awareness the constant change brings makes it easier to notice surroundings and stop to dwell in the moment, count blessings, and breathe deep. The golden tinged sadness of time's passage.
Thursday, October 22, 2015
The air was cool but still and the sun warm, as I sat on our back steps finishing lunch and sipping iced tea. The light and calls of my two youngest lulled me into a reverie. My 3-year-old was waiting for me to put him on the "trampabine" and his little sister followed him around, babbling in kind after him.
So many distractions in the world around me, changes that seem never-ending and exhausting. A Facebook newsfeed ever-revolving - an addiction I mindlessly allow to eat minutes of my day, steal moments away. Variable, but constant calls to shop my way out of the moment of boredom, frustration, loneliness - e-mail sales flyers full of fantastic deals, online shopping groups and pages established by well-meaning friends building their own businesses, lovely full-color catalogs and magazines delivered to my mailbox.
The (often self-manufactured) drama of others' lives - locally and globally - splayed for all to see online: divorces, lost friends, sickness. Yet another neighbor moves, another play mate for my children gone. Another mom friend packs to leave.

The constant pull to advise, instruct, and enlighten or seek others' advice, instruction, and enlightenment provided by today's social media and online "communities."
I often consider these things the business of my days, but so often many of them - or letting myself be consumed by them - distracts me from the business of a life. My life. As a wife. As a mom. As a human. My children's lives. Their hearts. Their minds.
As I struggle to stay in the moment, not let myself be ferreted away some rabbit hole of depression or boredom or frustration by the constant change, I can - for the first time in my life - catch a glimmer of the joy and peace in always turning back to a constant God.
So I breathe in the fall air deeply, soak in the colors - the changing of the seasons is a call back to that eternal Constancy, a reminder that there are things out there unfettered by our petty human dramas. Something that will keep moving us forward, regardless of what else swirls around us.
And it is reassuring.
So many distractions in the world around me, changes that seem never-ending and exhausting. A Facebook newsfeed ever-revolving - an addiction I mindlessly allow to eat minutes of my day, steal moments away. Variable, but constant calls to shop my way out of the moment of boredom, frustration, loneliness - e-mail sales flyers full of fantastic deals, online shopping groups and pages established by well-meaning friends building their own businesses, lovely full-color catalogs and magazines delivered to my mailbox.
The (often self-manufactured) drama of others' lives - locally and globally - splayed for all to see online: divorces, lost friends, sickness. Yet another neighbor moves, another play mate for my children gone. Another mom friend packs to leave.
The constant pull to advise, instruct, and enlighten or seek others' advice, instruction, and enlightenment provided by today's social media and online "communities."
I often consider these things the business of my days, but so often many of them - or letting myself be consumed by them - distracts me from the business of a life. My life. As a wife. As a mom. As a human. My children's lives. Their hearts. Their minds.
As I struggle to stay in the moment, not let myself be ferreted away some rabbit hole of depression or boredom or frustration by the constant change, I can - for the first time in my life - catch a glimmer of the joy and peace in always turning back to a constant God.
So I breathe in the fall air deeply, soak in the colors - the changing of the seasons is a call back to that eternal Constancy, a reminder that there are things out there unfettered by our petty human dramas. Something that will keep moving us forward, regardless of what else swirls around us.
And it is reassuring.
Tuesday, October 6, 2015
The bounty of fall
We gathered handfuls and armfuls of leaves and through them into the golden air so that they could rain down on us as we bounced and ran around the trampoline. I giggled with them as they ran and slipped in the leaves and fell into each other and me.
I wanted a picture of it - maybe to post on Facebook? - but there was no way to capture the beauty and glory of that moment in one photo, or ten, or even a video - and I didn't want to leave to get a camera - so I sent up a prayer that I would remember that moment forever - their smallness, their innocence, the light, the leaves, the giggles, the gratitude. I'm not sure how I got so lucky, but I hope I can remember these small moments in twenty years and be just as satisfied with where I am.
Sunday, August 16, 2015
Summertime Blues
The crickets sang in the grasses. They sang the song of summer's ending, a sad, monotonous song. "Summer is over and gone," they sang. "Over and gone, over and gone. Summer is dying, dying."
The crickets felt it was their duty to warn everybody that summertime cannot last forever. Even on the most beautiful days in the whole year - the days when summer is changing into fall - the crickets spread the rumor of sadness and change.
Everybody heard the song of the crickets. Avery and Fern Arable heard it as they walked the dusty road. They knew that school would soon begin again. The young geese heard it and knew that they would never be little goslings again. Charlotte heard it and knew that she hadn't much time left. Mrs. Zuckerman, at work in the kitchen, heard the crickets, and a sadness came over her, too. "Another summer gone," she sighed. Lurvy, at work building a crate for Wilbur, heard the song and knew it was time to dig potatoes.
"Summer is over and gone," repeated the crickets. "How many nights till frost?" sang the crickets. "Good-bye, summer, good-bye, good-bye!"
The sheep heard the crickets, and they felt so uneasy they broke a hole in the pasture fence and wandered up in to the field across the road. The gander discovered the hole and led his family through, and they walked to the orchard and ate the apples that were lying on the ground. A little maple tree in the swamp heard the cricket song and turned bright red with anxiety.
And maybe, just maybe, I hope he'll miss us just a little bit, too.
Thursday, August 13, 2015
"How can you have any pudding, if you don't eat your beans?"
I always feel ahead of the game if we can somehow get a vegetable in for breakfast. And if it also contains chocolate, well, win-win. A couple of delicious breakfast muffins where the "good stuff" just blends right in:
Double-chocolate Zucchini Muffin
Carrot Chocolate Chip Muffins
Double-chocolate Zucchini Muffin
Carrot Chocolate Chip Muffins
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
The Flowers in the Weeds
These days. I am "in the weeds." Or "the rough," as golfers might call it. The messy, the dirty, the untamed and unkempt, the lost. The tough days. Those long days in the short years you've heard about parenthood. There are diapers and potty accidents. Sticky, drippy messes and muddy footprints. There are always more dishes to wash, more laundry to do, more toys to pick up, more housecleaning to carry out, more cooking to plan and accomplish. I spend so much of my day taking care of my family - which I do willingly and humbly. But I often reach the end of the day and wonder how many times I actually looked at my children and smiled. How many kind words did I offer, as opposed to words of direction, correction, and - more often than I'd like to admit - derision?
I am a mediocre housekeeper and that is when I exert my best effort. When the kids ask for my attention (or pull on my skirt to get it, as our 18-month old does), I always have just one more "little thing," "one more minute," before I can give them my attention and I step around them, pull away from them, move outside of them. Even once I do, my mind wonders to what I'm cooking for dinner or the next load of laundry to be gathered, and I watch the clock, counting the seconds until I'm up again and moving. And I know they have figured it out - they are not stupid - I see the difference in their expectations of me and my husband, they know who will take the time to wrestle with them and who has just "one more thing" to do before they can join.
This weekend, I spent two nights away from the family and vowed upon my return to sit with my children and listen - there should be no reason for me to feel like there were chores for me to do, returning late on a Sunday afternoon. I let them surround me, squeeze in beside me, wrap their hands and arms around me, assail me with their stories and hugs. It felt wonderful and I promised myself I would try each day to find a moment where I settle in among them - instead of holding myself above them, outside of them - and let them consume me. Let myself be consumed by them.
What I hope to find is that letting myself just sit and recharge with my charges - the reason for the rest of my busy-ness, the blessings that give that work - and my life - meaning - will help me get more accomplished, not less; or at least not care so much about the weeds around me.
I am a mediocre housekeeper and that is when I exert my best effort. When the kids ask for my attention (or pull on my skirt to get it, as our 18-month old does), I always have just one more "little thing," "one more minute," before I can give them my attention and I step around them, pull away from them, move outside of them. Even once I do, my mind wonders to what I'm cooking for dinner or the next load of laundry to be gathered, and I watch the clock, counting the seconds until I'm up again and moving. And I know they have figured it out - they are not stupid - I see the difference in their expectations of me and my husband, they know who will take the time to wrestle with them and who has just "one more thing" to do before they can join.
This weekend, I spent two nights away from the family and vowed upon my return to sit with my children and listen - there should be no reason for me to feel like there were chores for me to do, returning late on a Sunday afternoon. I let them surround me, squeeze in beside me, wrap their hands and arms around me, assail me with their stories and hugs. It felt wonderful and I promised myself I would try each day to find a moment where I settle in among them - instead of holding myself above them, outside of them - and let them consume me. Let myself be consumed by them.
What I hope to find is that letting myself just sit and recharge with my charges - the reason for the rest of my busy-ness, the blessings that give that work - and my life - meaning - will help me get more accomplished, not less; or at least not care so much about the weeds around me.
Monday, August 10, 2015
Self-care Goodie Bag for Mamas
For the women in your life undergoing stressful life changes and transitions - a new baby, surgery, a death in the family, a new job - a gentle, generous reminder to take care of themselves first.
A self-care goodies bag for young moms (summer version):
Something fun, pretty, but light to read, like Family Circle.
Something delicious and nutritious like Luna Protein Bars.
Something refreshing to drink, like Madhava's Luscious Lemonade.
Something cleansing and invigorating like Yes To's cleansing face wipes.
Something that makes her feel pretty, but is also nourishing, like Burt's Bees Tinted Lip Balm.
Something soothing and pleasing to the senses, like a gently scented candle.
Something for creative expression and stress relief like a set of colored pencils and mandala coloring pages, like Design Originals Creative Coloring Mandalas that include uplifting quotes with each coloring page.
A self-care goodies bag for young moms (summer version):
Something fun, pretty, but light to read, like Family Circle.
Something delicious and nutritious like Luna Protein Bars.
Something refreshing to drink, like Madhava's Luscious Lemonade.
Something cleansing and invigorating like Yes To's cleansing face wipes.
Something that makes her feel pretty, but is also nourishing, like Burt's Bees Tinted Lip Balm.
Something soothing and pleasing to the senses, like a gently scented candle.
Something for creative expression and stress relief like a set of colored pencils and mandala coloring pages, like Design Originals Creative Coloring Mandalas that include uplifting quotes with each coloring page.
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