Chaos, Wonder and the Spiritual Adventures of Parenting

While I wasn’t raised with religion as a weekly part of my life, I am grateful for the values that my parents brought me up with and I’m glad that I consider spirituality and connection to the earth and those around me as part of my life.  Now, my own little family sometimes attends services at a Unitarian Universalist meetinghouse near our home.  I jumped at the idea of an online book discussion of Chaos, Wonder and the Spiritual Adventures of Parenting advertised in their weekly email.  I’m looking forward to digging in.

It’s just so fun watching M and my dad together.  They are both doing such a great job!  We’re still working on getting her to say Grandpa.

Thank Goodness for Grandpa!

What a crazy past couple of days!  Thursday was our wedding anniversary (4 years) and I started to feel a bad cold coming on and my voice fading fast, Friday my dad arrived and my yoga weekend began, Saturday morning R left for Italy for over a week, Saturday I taught my first yoga class, and Sunday I had yoga training all day.  Thank goodness for Grandpa Ron.  He did a great job taking care of and keeping M entertained all weekend!  I think he changed his first diapers in almost 32 years!  He snapped this cute photo and sent it to me on Sunday.  Notice how she has her hands in her “pockets” again.

Teaching my first yoga class was really interesting.  I didn’t prepare as much as I had hoped to.  I planned to cram right at the end, and then I got sick and lost my voice!  I think being sick really gave me an excuse to stink, if I did, I could blame the sickness.  Also, I told myself, I don’t really plan on teaching, so it doesn’t matter if I am any good this weekend.  I think both those stories I told myself really kept me from being overly nervous or anxious.  But as that room started to fill up (35 people I think!) I got more and more nervous.  As my fellow teachers began our practice, my stomach turned more and more.  And then it was my turn.  I just got up there, and I just did it. I was comfortable, I was calm, and I really enjoyed it!  I can’t wait to do it again.

 

 

 

 

Mental Health Day

It was supposed to be a day spent teaching yoga to some good friends who so kindly volunteered to be my guinea pigs, but it turned in to a relaxing mental health day. Life is busy these days with R working so many different jobs, me in yoga training and M down to one nap a day. Last week i had yoga all weekend. This past week he had a symphony gig, which means Monday home together, Tuesday teaching private lessons and Wednesday, Thursday and Friday late night rehearsals over an hour away. He decided to stay overnight Friday night because of snow Saturday so I was in charge around here. There was a last minute babysitter switch for Saturday during yoga training. I had planned to finish preparing to teach, but had M instead. It was a great day but no planning happened. I was unprepared, I was not feeling like driving and just wanted to be home, all day, no plans. It was selfish to cancel and I feel guilty, but I also feel rested and grounded. I caught up with my family, I finished a book, I took a snooze. I didn’t even get out of my pjs! It’s been quite a while since I’ve had a day like that. I hated to cancel but I needed my Sunday so bad.

Cousins

When I was a kid, I was lucky enough to live close enough to some of my cousins that we were able to see them for dinner any weekend night we’d like.  Another group of cousins lived a mere half day car ride away and I loved going to spend time with them, especially on longer visits during the summer.  I loved the hustle and bustle of their house of multiple children with people always coming and going.  I also grew up with cousins in two New England locations and we managed to see each of them every other year or so, with us taking trips up there way, or them heading down our way.

As an adult, I am thankful to live less than 4 hours away from my cousins in New Hampshire and their home has become a lovely place to go when we need to disconnect and unwind.  I continue to grow closer to my cousin in New York, and look forward to going to her wedding this year!  And two of my cousins have lived in Boston, with one of them recently heading back south.  Luckily, my only female cousin on that side remains in Boston and within quick driving distance!

Since I have no siblings, M probably won’t ever have as many cousins as I do.  She has two female cousins and we spent such great quality time with them over the break.  She loved every minute of it, did a great job sharing, and even gave out kisses and hugs.  And her cousins did such a great job keeping her entertained and safe (in houses with stairs, etc.).  I’m thankful everyone was so happy together and we sure do wish we all lived closer so the girls could see each other more often.

Christmas 2011 Recap

We had a nice long vacation to FL to see all of our family for Christmas, but it sure felt like a whirlwind trip!  We caught up with just about everyone and spent lots of quality family time with all of the grandparents.  M learned some new words: No, Please, Get Down . . .
We ate at or got take out from some of our old favorites.  We had a quick visit to the beach.  The weather was beautiful, and allowed us to eat several meals outside, but we didn’t do any swimming.  It just wasn’t hot enough to warrant needing to cool down in the pool.  Miss M and my mom did a lot of walking up and down the street.  M did not do a lot of sleeping.  Not sure if it was teething or just being away from home, but she seems to like being back in her own bed now.  Thank you to all the friends and family that adjusted their schedules and made some time to hang with us – we really appreciate it and loved seeing you!  To those we missed this time – we hope to see you very soon!

Why Do Good?

My office has a reputation for putting out pretty cool holiday cards.  Some of them take some pretty significant time to develop – think a couple hundred hours for the interactive game.  This year, we decided to take that time and put it toward something more charitable.  But we still wanted to include something a little creative for the holiday message in our e-newsletter, so we were all asked to submit an image, not necessarily a photograph, of what doing good means to us.  At first I had no idea how to represent that feeling visually.  Then, I asked myself, what are the reasons that I do good?  And one of them was: I do good things with the hope of instilling that feeling of generosity and caring in my daughter, like my parents did for me.

And so, I used this photo for the card this year:

Why do you do good?

Thanksgiving

We went to Contoocook, NH again this year to celebrate with my Aunt, Uncle and Cousins.  Again, it was awesome!  So relaxing – full of family and great food!  We were there a few weeks prior because of the power outage so she just jumped right in and made herself at home.  I was relieved that she was slightly less interested in the stairs then the previous trip, although many times someone had to sit on the stairs to keep her from going up them.  Luckily there is a door at the top, so we didn’t have to worry about her going down them!  We had a much smaller group than normal (only 15 or so people to eat the 35lb turkey this year!).  We missed Great Cousin Amy so much, as well Gretchen and Graham and the Nilon family (who all moved back south this year). We were also missing two couples that are friends of the family who come every year.  I had been promising Izzie she’d be playing with a 5-month old golden retriever, but they had to cancel at the last minute.  M loved my cousin Dan’s daughter Evelyn and followed her around like a puppy dog.  Although she wasn’t sure what to think when Evelyn crawled in to my lap.  M whined a bit and then came over and sat in my lap too.  So cute!  Much to be thankful for, this year, and always.

 

So Thankful

I’m just about to complete month three of training in my 200-hour yoga teacher training.  We’re learning poses (asana), but so much more.  We’re learning how to live yoga.  Everyone I spoke to before I started said it would change my life, and it’s already changing the way I look at life.  Right now, we’re learning about the Yamas, or the restraints.  They aren’t rules, they are a practice.  It’s meant for you to observe how this practice affects your well-being.  The first yama is Ahimsa, or non-harming, and the second is Satya, or truthfulness.  (That’s as far as we’ve gotten so far).  Are your thoughts and actions non-harming? For yourself? For others?  Are they truthful?  Are you being honest with yourself? With others? How far does honesty go before it becomes harmful?  Can you recognize that your truth is not always another’s truth? We’re also learning about the three gunas, the three types of energy, and using these qualities to classify instead of emotions like anger, sadness, etc.  The three gunas are Rajas (restless energy), Tamas (dull, stagnant energy) and Satva (lightness of being, the state of pure content, bliss).  Studying these things and reading the books we’ve been reading is making me more observant about my life and the things around me.  When I feel satva I really notice it, maybe because now I have a name for it.  It’s happiness, yeah, but it’s more than that.  It’s just pure bliss when you feel it.  I’m noticing my thoughts and actions more.  I’m classifying them, and I’m deciding which ones I like and which ones I don’t.

I write all this as background for the story of what I did tonight and how it made me feel.  After a short coat drive, my co-workers and I handed out coats, dinners and homemade cookies to those less fortunate in the park downtown tonight.  We were lucky that it wasn’t very cold (only about 60 degrees or so), but it was raining pretty hard.  We still had a lot of people come, and we had a line forming well before the start time we’d announced.  We had plenty of coats, but most of the men wanted or needed XL and bigger, so there weren’t enough to go around.  We had plenty of soup and homemade cookies, but the sandwiches went fast, and not everyone got one.  But, I think we made a lot of people happy.  I had grabbed a box of 80 garbage bags when I left the office, and people took those to keep their stuff and themselves dry.  I spoke to a lot of really nice people.  There were a few very nice gentlemen who helped us setup and suggested we have people draw numbers for the coats, which turned out to be a lifesaver for organization!  I met one guy who said my dimples brightened his day.  I told him that him saying that brightened mine.  I met a few women, at least one of which was there with her husband.  I assume that not everyone was homeless, but I don’t know.  I did hear several talking about local shelters or soup kitchens, and a couple mentioning they didn’t have anywhere dry to sleep that night.  One of the men who helped us set up boasted about a job he could get, in construction, that he was highly qualified for and paid $12 an hour, but he couldn’t get the job because he didn’t have a car to get there.  I met another guy who told me about his kidney infection, and then apologized for telling me too much.  Little did he know I know all about those too, and that I’m pretty good at sharing too much info myself.  The guy who struck me the most was a nice man with two little girls.  The girls were waiting at the library, staying dry and warm.  He got two of the few children’s coats we collected.  I loaded him up with extra muffins and cookies.  They’re three and five years old he said.  We joked about how hard it is to raise a child, but he said it brings him such joy.  I teased and asked, so, do you love having two, should I have another one?  And he said absolutely!  And went on about what great friends his girls are.  And how they’ll always be there for each other.  And then he was off to deliver the cookies.  We had run out of sandwiches, so he said that would be their dinner that night.  I gave him a few extra bags of cookies.  I loved handing out the cookies.  I got to smile at and say hi to every single person there.  Satva, that’s it for me!

I drove home soaked to the bone and muddy as anything, but feeling great about all the good we did tonight.  I thought about how I want to take every Wednesday and make PB&J sandwiches on my lunch break, and stay late every Wednesday to pass out sandwiches and chat with people.  I thought, how can I make this happen?  If this isn’t realistic, what is?  I have some thinking to do about that.

As soon I was home I started just seeing everything around me, and being so thankful for all of it.  I could name so much I am thankful for.  I thought about the people who said they didn’t know where they were going to sleep tonight, and I thought about how helpless I felt when the power was out here and our house was getting so cold, and how I didn’t know where we would sleep so that my baby could be warm.  Wow, nothing compared to what that father must feel everyday.  I don’t know that they are homeless, but they sure do have much different worries than I do.  Even sitting here now, looking around my living room, I have all these things.  I’m thankful that my family and I can provide these things to my daughter.  I’m thankful that I can bathe her in a warm bathtub whenever I want.  I can dress her in fresh pajamas.  I can tuck her in at night with a blanket made by her great great aunt, in her crib, in her own room, under our own roof with walls and heat, a house that’s nice and warm and cozy.  I worry about how much she eats, and what she eats, but not because I can’t provide her enough to eat.  I think about all the little things that make me feel satvic (blissful):  a warm cup of tea, listening to music and singing with my daughter, rocking in the rocking chair with her at bedtime, pulling my down comforter up over myself at night, stretching my legs out and sinking in to my mattress as I fall asleep.   I think of how the people I met tonight don’t get the chance to feel this satva from these things.  I’m sure joy comes to them in other things, at least I hope so.

I’ll go to work tomorrow, because I have a car that can take me there.  I’ll bring home a paycheck, and even if I didn’t have my job for some reason, I have places we could go, people who would help us.  I’m happy to help these people, even if it’s only one warm meal, or one warm coat.  And I’m thankful I got to spend an evening with them.  I’m thankful for my stuff, but even more thankful for the love in my life.  I’m so lucky, I’m so thankful.  That’s bliss to me.

Power Outage continued . . .

Like I said, we stayed two cold nights in the house without power (Saturday and Sunday) and then two nights with my boss and his family (Monday and Tuesday) and by Wednesday we were just over Connecticut.  We had confirmed that the school where R teaches was going to be closed for the week and CL&P put out a prediction of Sunday for our power to be back on (8 days after it went out), hotels were still packed with no capacity, so we felt like we wanted to get out of dodge.  We headed up north to New Hampshire to stay with my aunt and uncle.  It was a very relaxing stay after a few hectic nights.  On Friday night we got the call from our neighbor that the power was back on.  I was still waiting to hear if my yoga studio was back up and running, because I had training at 12noon on Saturday.  We planned to go back Saturday, but just weren’t sure if we needed to hurry back or could enjoy the Farmers’ Market in NH first.  Friday night, the studio also got its power back, so Saturday morning we headed home, with about 20 minutes to spare before my 6.5 hour training session began.  Saturday night I did as much as I could to get the house back in order, before totally crashing from exhaustion.  Sunday was just spent trying to get the house, yard, our lives, back together, and restocking the fridge for the second time in two months!  We are so happy to be home sleeping in our own (warm) beds.  This brief time without electricity, the feelings of helplessness and of not being able to provide shelter for our family have made us feel very thankful for all we have.

Even More Words

Miss M is speaking more and more everyday.  She says wa-wa for water, up, book, woof and even more.  She has a particular book with some animal sounds and she’ll get it out and point to the dog and say “woof.”  She also did this the other day when our neighbor asked her what the dog says.  At daycare they say “not nice” when one of the kids does something they shouldn’t be doing, like throwing food over the side of their highchair, so now Miss M says it too.  She still does the things that aren’t nice, but just says “not nice” after she does them.  And her little voice has such a little attitude when she says it.  I have to get that on video!  A few days ago I scolded the dog for something and M walked over to the dog and said “not nice” right to her face.  She also said it to one of the other kids at daycare when they upzipped and took her coat off on the playground.  Everyone at daycare got a real kick out of that.  So fun that she’s saying words, and even cooler that she’s using them in context!  Of course she says, uh-oh and on-no.  She points to herself in the mirror and on the video and says “baby.”  She also has started saying Bella when pointing to her cousin in her custom board book!  Check out the video.  (Big shout out to Grandma Jane who just sent Miss M a bunch of super stylish fall outfits!)