This morning I cracked three eggs into a blue ceramic bowl and discovered that two of them had double yolks. Must be my lucky day.
As the girls and I ate breakfast, I told them they each could make a wish because of our lucky eggs. I tried to get Nina to tell me her wish but she knows better than that now. The last time she made a wish, it didn't come true and I told her that some people believe wishes don't work if you say them out loud. So, now she has a second chance and she’s not going to say a word to me about her wish.
This whole incident started me thinking about luck. What is luck and how do we get it? Do we make it for ourselves? Are we born with it? Or is it just about how we view the world?
I hear that advocates of The Secret, that much-touted, Oprah’s list book, believe that if you merely think positively – if you just wish hard enough – then all of your desires will be realized. It’s like the ultimate get-rich-quick scheme (and it seems to be working for the book’s authors). At the same time, these people also believe that you can give yourself cancer with your negative thoughts.
If you want my opinion, this is just bunk. Luck is all a matter of perspective.
One of our family traditions each summer is to spend a weekend on the Cape. We head out towards the end of June when hopes for summer weather are high, but the hotel rates have not yet risen to match them. The girls really look forward to this trip and I’ve written about it before. We always leave our house with high expectations for our long weekend adventure but reality sets in about an hour into the journey. There is something about vacationing with small children that is very challenging. So while we are building really great memories with our kids, we are also trying to keep our sanity while driving four hours in our car and then sharing a small hotel room for three or four days.
Each year, as they get older, the trip will get a little easier. Perhaps one of these times, they won’t flop themselves into the ocean fully clothed within the first five minutes of seeing the beach. Maybe they will eventually learn to use an indoor voice in the hotel’s common breakfast room or maybe I will just ignore the looks I think I’m getting from other guests.
As the mother of these two lovely and rambunctious girls, I typically spend part of the weekend feeling annoyed and frustrated. But this year, just as I was beginning to feel unlucky, we met the family staying two doors down from us at the hotel. There was a single mother with two kids, a boy and a girl. It was clear that the son had some developmental issues and was hard to deal with. But this woman was doing it alone, smiling and patient the whole time. To me it seemed as if she had figured it out, even though you could tell it wasn't easy to deal with her energetic son. She was amazing to watch – calm and loving, where I would probably have been tense, anxious and cranky.
Maybe we do only get as much as we can handle in life. Maybe good luck and bad luck are just flip sides of the same coin. Maybe in those moments when I start to feel unlucky, I should remember to pay attention to the beauty around me.
Watching the girls as they run and play together on the beach, seeing the excitement in Nina’s face as she watches the waves (usually with her mouth open), and the wonder in Rita’s eyes when she figured out that the “statue” in downtown Provincetown was actually a real person (she couldn’t take her eyes away). These are the moments I need to pay attention to. I like to listen to them as they tell each other stories or play pretending games. They are much more relaxed and fun when we don't interfere with a correction or shushing. These two little girls are such a treasure and we are lucky that they look out for each other and love each other so much.
My work is in learning to let go of - or at least loosen - my expectations and be okay with the fact that things are not always going to go exactly as I think I want them to. I have to try to find the beauty in what comes instead of always trying to control it. And, I have to remember that I am lucky.
Thursday, July 15, 2010
Friday, July 2, 2010
Snuggle Time
It's 7:15 a.m. There are dishes in the sink, unfolded laundry in a basket by the
chair that we pile the folded clothes onto before we decide we want to wear them, and cat hair tumbleweeds blow freely across the floor. My husband is making the lunches but breakfast still needs to be prepared and I am sitting on the couch under the comfortable heft of my three-year old, while her older sister sits beside me, holding my arm in a vice-like grip. She's trying to train herself to stop pinching me but it's slow-going. They are drinking milk. It's our morning snuggle time. I try to forget about all of the things that aren't getting done around me as I sit, tethered to the couch. I try instead to inhale the smell of my daughter's hair and enjoy the cozy warmth of their little bodies.
This is how most days start at our house and I've learned that when we miss our morning snuggle time, things don't go quite as smoothly as when I surrender to it. Someone eventually starts screaming or refuses to get dressed or brush her hair. These are alternatives that I can do without. It's hard enough to get all of us out the door on time in the morning when things go well.
Despite my knowing that morning snuggle time is the key to peacefully starting our day, it is not in my nature to sit like this. I constantly work at it. I am a chronic putterer. I do my best thinking and problem-solving while meandering around the house putting things in order - doing dishes, folding laundry, sorting socks.
To the casual observer, it may appear that I am simply performing mundane tasks, but in reality, I am solving the world's problems. Okay, that's not true, but I am considering the various predicaments under my jurisdiction at home and at work. My puttering time is typically when creative solutions pop into my head, so I relish it. Besides, when I spend time this way, there are definitely fewer cat hair tumbleweeds in the house.
However, I also know just how important is to make sure that I take the time to really be present for these strong-willed, bright, funny girls. Making space for them to talk and letting them lounge on me without my being distracted is the best gift I can give them, but sometimes I find it so difficult to do. My mind will be racing along at top speed, working on who knows what, and I'll abruptly be pulled back to the present and realize that I have two kids climbing all over me. When I do give them all of my attention, the payoff is so great. Everyone feels happy, heard and valued. Isn't this what we all crave? Why do I struggle so much with giving this gift to my girls? Each day, I have to set an intention to do this small thing because I know it is what really matters for them in the long run.
chair that we pile the folded clothes onto before we decide we want to wear them, and cat hair tumbleweeds blow freely across the floor. My husband is making the lunches but breakfast still needs to be prepared and I am sitting on the couch under the comfortable heft of my three-year old, while her older sister sits beside me, holding my arm in a vice-like grip. She's trying to train herself to stop pinching me but it's slow-going. They are drinking milk. It's our morning snuggle time. I try to forget about all of the things that aren't getting done around me as I sit, tethered to the couch. I try instead to inhale the smell of my daughter's hair and enjoy the cozy warmth of their little bodies.This is how most days start at our house and I've learned that when we miss our morning snuggle time, things don't go quite as smoothly as when I surrender to it. Someone eventually starts screaming or refuses to get dressed or brush her hair. These are alternatives that I can do without. It's hard enough to get all of us out the door on time in the morning when things go well.
Despite my knowing that morning snuggle time is the key to peacefully starting our day, it is not in my nature to sit like this. I constantly work at it. I am a chronic putterer. I do my best thinking and problem-solving while meandering around the house putting things in order - doing dishes, folding laundry, sorting socks.
To the casual observer, it may appear that I am simply performing mundane tasks, but in reality, I am solving the world's problems. Okay, that's not true, but I am considering the various predicaments under my jurisdiction at home and at work. My puttering time is typically when creative solutions pop into my head, so I relish it. Besides, when I spend time this way, there are definitely fewer cat hair tumbleweeds in the house.
However, I also know just how important is to make sure that I take the time to really be present for these strong-willed, bright, funny girls. Making space for them to talk and letting them lounge on me without my being distracted is the best gift I can give them, but sometimes I find it so difficult to do. My mind will be racing along at top speed, working on who knows what, and I'll abruptly be pulled back to the present and realize that I have two kids climbing all over me. When I do give them all of my attention, the payoff is so great. Everyone feels happy, heard and valued. Isn't this what we all crave? Why do I struggle so much with giving this gift to my girls? Each day, I have to set an intention to do this small thing because I know it is what really matters for them in the long run.
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Sensitive

The bruise on my forehead is an ugly patchwork of blues and yellows. It will be a week old tomorrow but it's still sensitive to the touch. I try to hide it behind my hair because otherwise people tend to gape and ask questions.
I almost wish I had a more dramatic story to explain what happened because the truth is a bit humiliating. It was raining. I was at the store and wanted to get into the car quickly. I whacked myself in the head with the corner of the car door. Instant swelling. Ugh.
By the time I got home, I had a bump the size of a small hen's egg over my left eye. I'll never forget the look on my husband's face. He was horrified. "Just get me the ice pack," I said. I didn't want the girls to see it because I knew I looked like a monster. But really, how was I going to hide it from them?
At dinner both of my girls had to see the "boo-boo" on my head. Rita, who's three, looked up at it with her mouth wide open. "I can kiss it, Mama," she said. She looked so scared that I had gotten hurt. It was upsetting to see her this worried, and it brought me back to a time when I saw my own mother get hurt and I was equally afraid.
I was probably 12 or 13 at the time. My mother had decided that she wanted to start exercising more regularly, so she took a ride on my sister's ten-speed. Only five minutes later she was back and it was clear that she was hurt. She had been riding along the side of the busy road that ran close to our house. For some reason she was looking over her shoulder and she rode right into a telephone pole. She hit it full force with the side of her face. It was swollen and bruised and she was crying.
I remember feeling very scared and worried. What if she had really done damage? Should we bring her to the hospital? I called my friends down the street and spoke with their mom. I told her what happened and I fully expected her to come down and make everything right, but instead she laughed at me. "She'll be fine," she said. In hindsight, I’m sure she was right but at the time I was really angry at her reaction. My mother was crying and I needed someone to fix it.
Maybe it was because my mother has always been so careful about not showing her emotions, but I was totally freaked out to see her so hurt and upset. It was out of the ordinary and I didn't know what to do with it. I was convinced that she needed to seek immediate medical attention.
So, now I know where my first instinct came from, the one that said that I shouldn’t show my girls the giant bump on my head. It's ingrained in me not to show my kids things that may make them uncomfortable. In the end, it was probably better that they did see it. And, they saw me put ice on it to bring the swelling down.
It seems that the lesson for me here is that it's okay for my kids to see that occasionally one of the grownups in their life may be hurt - physically or emotionally - but that we can (and do) make it through the pain to be okay again. God, who would have thought it would take 40+ years to figure out something that seems so simple?
Tuesday, June 8, 2010
Going Round and Round

Work! I'm doing work right now. What is the matter with me? It's my writing night but because I won't be in the office for the next two days, I'm tidying up a bunch of email. This is not what writing night is all about. I am supposed to be sitting here, thinking about witty things that I can write short essays about. And, truth be told, I have a backlog of unfinished posts that I am having trouble finishing. I'm not sure why this is.
My semester as a grad student is finished and most of my big events at work are wrapped up until the fall, but I seem to be spinning my wheels here. I was hoping to spend time this summer writing for fun and maybe trying to publish something (while trying not to get my hopes up on this - plus, I that means I would actually have to finish something and submit it). I have set aside one night a week as writing night where I get together with a friend who is on deadline to finish her dissertation. I also get up early to write three pages of whatever comes to me in the morning.
For the past two weeks, I have been unable to complete anything concrete. I scribble in my notebook or I surf the web. Maybe I am still coming down from a very intense time and I just need to give myself a break. But at some point, I think I just have to write and finish something - and here I was about to go on to say, "or give up on this dream" but then I literally stopped myself and deleted those words before they were finished. I mean, who cares if I don't finish a thing? If I don't create a single, coherent written piece? I just like the act of writing, of choosing words and phrases that go together and linger in my head for a while, that I can see on the screen or on the page.
The act of writing helps me to process things differently than I do when I am just in my head without pen and paper or keyboard. I often end up in a very different place than I imagined I would when I started. It's like somewhere in my brain there's a path I have to follow and it feels comfortable and familiar but I don't know where it leads until I get there - and then when I do get there, I realize that there is still a lot more path ahead. I guess this is my roundabout manifesto on why I need to keep pursuing this act of writing, without judging how or where it's going.
Monday, March 1, 2010
Weaning Myself off Distraction

I'm trying something new and it may take me a while to get it right...
Between my job and my doctoral program, my workload is at a tipping point. I feel like if I add one more project I will be completely paralyzed and not be able get anything done. At the end of the day, I joke to a colleague, "Well, I'm going to put this wedge under the boulder I've been pushing uphill all day and just come back to it tomorrow." I know that if I miss one day, or lose even an hour or two, it might destabilize the pile of work that I imagine is balancing precariously on the very corner of my desk. One wrong move and it will spill to the floor in a heap.
Thank god I'm not dealing with matters of life and death in my work. I mean, I hope that I'm making some kind of impact, but honestly, if I disappeared tomorrow, things would go on (but I think people would be really pissed that I wasn't there to finish what I started).
Anyway, I digress... The problem here is that I have to modify my work style. For too long I have been able to work more-or-less effectively by multi-tasking my way through the day. I constantly have my email open so that I can respond quickly to any messages. I might be chatting online with someone while proofreading a report, or checking the local news while reading scholarship applications. People constantly stop by my office to gossip or chat about our latest crisis. When I am home reading for class or writing a paper, I always have email and Facebook open. This is no longer working for me. The truth is that I have to get rid of some of these distractions and start tuning out unnecessary things out so I that I can focus on what matters.
First, I dumped Twitter. I hardly ever used it anyway, so this was easy to do. My next step will be to close my email and limit myself to checking it only a few times a day - I know this will be very difficult for me. I am addicted to being online and reachable. Facebook is another distraction and it is one of those things that I know I could live without but I would miss hearing what my punk-rock friends in Providence are up to. I know I can't completely abandon it, but at least I can have rules around when I am on.
Keeping these distractions to a minimum is much harder than I ever thought. I have become used to the instant gratification that comes with our digital lives. I need to know now who is sending me email and who is commenting on my post. When did this happen? It makes me wonder whether I have always had a short attention span or if this is a side effect of trying to do too many things in this life.
I know that if I want to be more thoughtful in my work and with my family, I have to find a way to focus on what is really important. I'm trying to see if I can use my online distractions as a "reward" for staying focused for longer periods of time. But really, this is a slippery slope. It's so easy just to spend half an hour or an hour surfing through the latest non-news posted by my closest 300 friends, leaving witty comments here and there. I've tried to narrow down my friend list but it's harder than you'd think. So, here I am back to square one, trying to find a way to focus on what is important while simultaneously justifying my online addiction...
Perhaps I'll give myself a month to try cutting back on the online distractions. If at the end of March I am still just as sidetracked by the virtual world, I may just give it up in favor of live-only interactions. Of course, I'll still have to keep email, you know, for work...
Monday, January 25, 2010
Sit with it

Here's a little nugget of wisdom that I need to remember. When events are not going my way or I'm upset, angry or uncomfortable, I have to be able to sit with that experience.
Just like New England weather, if I give it enough time, it will change.
I have difficulty with stillness. I should sit with that...
Wednesday, December 30, 2009
Overcoming Inertia
I took some time out this week to go away overnight with a couple of my girlfriends
. These are women that I have known for most of my life -- my oldest and dearest friends. We had been thinking about going away for a while and it just worked out that we could all meet for a couple of days during the week between Christmas and New Year's. We all had the same thought that if we had a good time, we'd try to make it an annual adventure. The funny thing is that we all were hesitant to announce this until it was clear that we were going to have a good time -- and we did. I can't remember when I've laughed so much.
So, what does this have to do with inertia?
This adventure with my friends was an example of letting go and being in the present moment. Particularly when you have small children, it can be difficult to feel that you fully live in the world. At least for me, a lot of time is spent worrying -- worrying that they will get hurt, that I am not doing the right thing, that they are being somehow ruined by something that I am doing as a crap parent.
Recently it occurred to me that I have not really been present much in my own life. I've been hovering on the edges, going through the motions and spending time in my head thinking about what could go wrong without really feeling fully integrated in things. I had forgotten how to listen to music. I was afraid of stupid things - like driving into Boston or letting my kids walk on the sidewalk without having to hold my hand. These are little things. I don't want to be afraid of life and I certainly don't want to raise girls who are afraid to live.
Anxiety and fear hold us back. They cause suffering that could be avoided if we could just let go of them. This is what I'd like to try for the new year. I want to be brave and embrace life more fully. I want to live.
But, it's never that simple, is it? We go along in life, following these well-worn grooves that we are accustomed to -- despite the fact that they might feel bad or uncomfortable. We do the same things over and over again because it's what we know. There's a great poem by Portia Nelson, called "Autobiography in Five Short Chapters" that talks about finding a new way. I think I'm on Chapter Three. My goal is to get to Chapter Five sometime in the future.
But, until I am able to find that other street, I am going to focus on living more, moving more, singing more and trying to let joy happen without focusing on doubts and fears.
. These are women that I have known for most of my life -- my oldest and dearest friends. We had been thinking about going away for a while and it just worked out that we could all meet for a couple of days during the week between Christmas and New Year's. We all had the same thought that if we had a good time, we'd try to make it an annual adventure. The funny thing is that we all were hesitant to announce this until it was clear that we were going to have a good time -- and we did. I can't remember when I've laughed so much.So, what does this have to do with inertia?
This adventure with my friends was an example of letting go and being in the present moment. Particularly when you have small children, it can be difficult to feel that you fully live in the world. At least for me, a lot of time is spent worrying -- worrying that they will get hurt, that I am not doing the right thing, that they are being somehow ruined by something that I am doing as a crap parent.
Recently it occurred to me that I have not really been present much in my own life. I've been hovering on the edges, going through the motions and spending time in my head thinking about what could go wrong without really feeling fully integrated in things. I had forgotten how to listen to music. I was afraid of stupid things - like driving into Boston or letting my kids walk on the sidewalk without having to hold my hand. These are little things. I don't want to be afraid of life and I certainly don't want to raise girls who are afraid to live.
Anxiety and fear hold us back. They cause suffering that could be avoided if we could just let go of them. This is what I'd like to try for the new year. I want to be brave and embrace life more fully. I want to live.
But, it's never that simple, is it? We go along in life, following these well-worn grooves that we are accustomed to -- despite the fact that they might feel bad or uncomfortable. We do the same things over and over again because it's what we know. There's a great poem by Portia Nelson, called "Autobiography in Five Short Chapters" that talks about finding a new way. I think I'm on Chapter Three. My goal is to get to Chapter Five sometime in the future.
But, until I am able to find that other street, I am going to focus on living more, moving more, singing more and trying to let joy happen without focusing on doubts and fears.
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