Thursday, July 14, 2011

Judging and Discerning



The other day I published a brief post, with a small mentioning that our children were away for the week. Away at a beloved summer camp. One that has been in existance for 75 years. One that apparently has been recongnized as an elite summer camp (news to me.) After conversing with a fellow co-worker about said camp and all of the 'plans' husband and I had for our kid-free week, the conversartion took a turn. A turn I wasn't prepared for. A turn that marked, well, a turning point.

"You send your kids to a private camp in the summer and a private acedemy during the school year, must be nice to live such a charmed life." Really? Nice curveball. Frankly, I could anticipate being judged for my decision to send my kids to private school, but camp? Seriously?

I'm still trying to connect the dots of how a benign conversation goes from an exchange of weekly plans; a plate of summer happenings, if you will, to this. To a conversation about whether I am doing my children a disservice by wanting them to have more choices in there education. More responsiveness.

So, I wonder. Am I spoiling my kids or just loving them?

And so I muse....

"I guess I assumed that when it comes to life and parenthood we all do things differently, that there are many legitimate and contrasting ways to approach existence and child-rearing.

How silly of me. How silly of me to not see this coming, this visceral and predictable reaction to my words.

Today I am thinking about judgment and whether it can be avoided. I’m not sure it can. As humans, we have the ability to reason and to judge. It is these very critical faculties that define us as a species. We would not survive a day in the world without the capacity to judge – whether a person is trustworthy, an action is safe, etc. To put it very simply (too simply, I reckon) to live is to judge.

Fine. But what about moral judgments? What about judgments about the way other people carry themselves and speak to others and raise their children? What about judgments about things that are not black and white and obvious, but exquisitely gray in essence? What about judgments about areas as complex as choice, as amorphous as affection? What about these kinds of judgment?

I don’t pretend to know all the answers. It may turn out that these judgments are rooted in who we are as people or who we were taught to be. I imagine this is the case. But don’t we also have discretion? Isn’t discretion a kind of judgment? Isn’t it up to us which judgments we articulate and which ones we keep to ourselves, tucked safely in our whirring minds? I think so. I know so.

And when is it okay to voice our moral judgments? Again, I only have a few clues. But I think this is an important question. One worth thinking about. Particularly as it relates to very sensitive topics like parenting.

Parenthood is a messy and treasured land. For the most part, we all live in this land with good intentions. We adore our children and want what’s best for them. We hope that our kids are happy and healthy and safe and grow up to be the same. Every day is an exercise in effort toward these important ends. And we all take different paths toward these more singular goals, don’t we? Some of us stay home. Some of us go to an office. Some of us home school. Some of us send our kids to private, some to public.

No mater what your choice. It's yours to make. Yours to live with. But one thing we can agree on is we all work for this decision.

Because parenthood? It’s work. Incredibly important and intangible work. Work that compels us and confuses us. Work that makes us cheer and makes us cry. Work that is never ever over.

And so. I’m not sure this post has a tidy point, but that’s okay. These words – it turns out – are as murky as the topics they tangle. And perhaps that’s appropriate.

If there’s a message here, maybe it’s that we are human and fallible and that we are wired to make judgments. Perhaps it is up to us to step back and evaluate our own judgments when and if they come. To pick them apart a bit and try to discern their origins. In the end, I think harsh judgments are unfortunate and fracturing and, for the most part, spring from insecurity. None of us are perfect.

Maybe just maybe, it behooves us to realize that we are all really more alike than we are different. That we are all trying and failing, thriving and fumbling, living and loving and learning. The best we can."

Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Up close


My Luci.

Some of you may know my little girl already. When home, we are virtually inseparable. My children comment "she loves you best, mom"

She's just the cutest little pup. So gentle and loving. Sweet and full of character. There's just so much to love about Luci.

Today, while missing my boys (they are at a week long camp on Lake Erie) I decided to distract myself. I pulled out my macro lens...it's been awhile! As I was taking close-ups of all the pretty flowers in our yard, Luci was right there with me. I just had to take her pic.

Her beautiful golden lashes make me swoon. I mean. Seriously. Are they not to die for?

Maybe just maybe. It might be time. Time for Luci to get a playmate.
To be continued....

Monday, June 6, 2011

Proud Mama


Among a number of other milestones that have taken place around here lately, my son was promoted from Middle School to High School today. My husband captured this moment of us after the ceremony. It's one of *those* pictures that speaks a thousand words.

I have so much on my heart I'd like to share, a million photographs and numerous blog posts swimming around in my head but for now, this one photo is enough.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Happy Easter

Happy Easter to all those who celebrate today! May your day be blessed.

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

My baby is 10


Dear Kian,


2/11/11


Ten years ago you made me a mother, again. TEN. Hard for me to believe because, in so many ways, it was yesterday. That snowy and dark winter morning. It was our fourth trip to the hospital. Yes, you kept us guessing and on our toes from the very start. But this time it was real. You arrived in a hurry, pink and screaming. 6 pounds 11 ounces. Immediately, I could tell. You looked nothing like your brother. Tiny, in comparison and brightly blued-eyed. The pictures are proof. How else do we record our moments, our magic? How else do we stop time and mark our memories?


Thanks goodness for pictures.


It seems like you have always been one of my very favorite companions, the person who accompanies me more then almost anyone else, providing commentary from morning to night. Singing. Giggling. And joking. You seem both infinitely older than last year and utterly the same. You grow ever more liminal, shifting between the ages you have been and will be. But it makes perfect sense. That you are ten. Because you are so big. So witty. Your intuition intrigues me. Your determination sustains me. And your songs make me chuckle. Highs, lows, intensity, tenderness, discord, harmony, all woven together in a unique concerto that has become the sound track of our lives.


You mean so much.


I know the days of holding hands and tucking you in are numbered. I know that someday soon I will definitively be mom, not mommy. But today. Today I look back– at your first day and first smiles and first steps. Today I am reminded that as you enter into double-digits, I will always have pictures. Many, many pictures. And words. And stories. Thank goodness. And so I sit here, celebrating the present moment in my PJs, imagining a future when you care to read these very words, words I write so you know how much and how impossibly I love you.


Happy Birthday, Kiwi

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Hibernates

A blizzard, then an ice storm. Then rain, then a cold snap, and everything freezes solid. Foliage is dead and buried, brittle or frozen. Everything hibernates.


Go ahead, says February. Find my beautiful. Oh, how I am trying.


Thanks to my new friend Photoshop; I'm looking at winter in a whole new way. A wide-open aperture. A deliberate shoving through of foreground. Focusing on the middle.

Lying in the snow has a whole new meaning!

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Waiting for spring


After the holiday rush, January is always a bit of a let down for me. The days are short. The air too cold and everything seems drab. And dark. Wanting spring and all its glory to be here now, I find myself searching out color anywhere I can. Be it the finches that populate my bare trees or the spring catalogues that fill my mailbox on a weekly bases. My anticipation of the new season is palable. And I find it difficult to wait for the colors of spring.