The Little Spitfire at Three

maggie mae

Maggie, 

I just want to say that I love you. I love you and your poofy hair, big smile and sweaty little hands so much. These past couple days have been some my most favorite and frustrating. You are so full of life, zest and good intentions. You are also amazingly smart, have a memory like a steel trap and full of questions. Today was a long day for us – long and tiring – and you were so helpful, patient and independent. 

A couple days ago you ‘spritzed’ your little sister with a concoction of water and hair conditioner while she was in her car seat….in the living room. By the time I walked into the room, she was covered from head to toe in the mixture and you were standing guiltily  over her with the spray bottle. She’s still pretty bald, so I’m not sure that your reasoning of having to spritz her hair was a good one. I had to suppress my laughter.

Your memory has always been stellar and I’m learning that you remember things that happened long, long ago. Like today you started talking about meeting one of my former co-workers and he let you play with a balloon and paddle ~ that was over a year ago and lasted for all but 15 minutes. And yesterday you were really concerned about Daddy’s old stand up paddle board. Turns out, you’d remembered his kite board and us giving it to a friend six months ago. You were able to tell us that it had two fins on it and was orange, otherwise we wouldn’t have remembered. There are countless stories like this: you remember something from long ago and we have to be reminded by you about it.  

You like to hear stories about when your daddy or I was little and have our extended family tree pretty much figured out. Today, after we had a long conversation about hitting, you came to me and checked to see if I ever hit when I was a little ‘goi,’ I answered truthfully and shared that I got in BIG trouble. Stories that we tell you and stories that we read to you help make up the fabric of your life and the connections you make to both shock us at times. Even though your bookshelf is full and we frequent the library, Fancy Nancy continues to be your favorite character, probably because you look and act like her sometimes. 

I have tried and tried to put your rainbow tutu in the dress up box, but you keep pulling it out and wearing it. You wear it EVERYWHERE. But you pair it with rain boots that make your feet sweat and stink, which I love. (not the stinky part). You hate to wear jeans (“too tight, mama!!”) and most often choose dresses over stretch pants. It’s clear you enjoy color by everything in your life. Your room is a blaze of colors – from your bedding to the pictures you draw at your desk.

You feel big emotions quite frequently – hugging tight hugs and smooching big smooches often. Lately you’ve been giving what I call ‘hits’ to me when you’re tired, but they’re more like little shoves, but never to your sister or friends. You direct most of your frustrations and whining to me, which I suppose I should be thankful for. Tonight you ‘hit’  me because I asked you to not shake the highchair while Audrey was in it – it’s hard to correct you when she’s cracking up, but we’d all feel horrible if the high chair came crashing down. You have gotten better at verbalizing when you get upset, “I’m angry. I’m frustrated” but, like any other three year old, you are susceptible  to a melt down from time to time.  And let’s be clear: you aren’t quiet when you’re upset. 

You still don’t like to fall asleep on your own, but you’ve been talking to us about it more and more. The other day, out of the blue, you announced to us that you were going to fall asleep that night all alone. You didn’t, in fact you didn’t even want to try when the time came, and I’m mostly fine with that. You like to snuggle close right up to the moment your eyes close, you’ve been like that since you were a teeny-weeny (your favorite way to describe something small these days) baby. You’ll finally fall asleep with your daddy – something you had to learn once Audrey arrived. On the nights that I do get to put you to bed, you hug and kiss me before we start reading, always complimenting me ‘You’re such a good mama. Always taking care of me. I love you’ is usually how it goes.

You almost always end up in our bed – sometimes in the middle of the night and sometimes in the wee hours of the morning. We can hear your not-so-quiet feet go padding down the hall in the morning to the fridge to get your cup of milk and your sprint coming back down the hall to our room. You drink your milk, pass the cup, and snuggle as close as possible before falling back asleep. 

We started doing something called Special Time every night after dinner – and it has really changed our little family. It’s 10 minutes that you get to spend with either me or your dad each night doing something special. We take turns picking, set the timer and have an all-out crazy time. Your favorite game to play with your dad is RunTickle. Here’s the rule: you run & you tickle. Your favorite game to play with me right now is Lion Girl. This means you run around the yard, with your hair going wild, and I commentate what you’re doing. “Here comes Lion Girl running up the hill. She’s so fast I can hardly see her!!” I hope that we always do Special Time in one form or another, but right now you wake up in the morning and start planning what you’re going to do for Special Time if it is your day to choose. It’s just ten minutes, but with Audrey being a baby and our days so fractured, I understand why you love that time….I love it too, Lion Girl. 

On the days that you fall asleep and your dad and I get some time to talk – without you our Audrey nestled between us – we tell each other anecdotes about things you said or did, often laughing at what we missed. More than once you have introduced Audrey to people as if she was just born and isn’t 6 months old. You elaborate on how the doctor took her out of my tummy and so on and so forth. You want everybody to know her…you are so proud of her. Even to the point of including her, as much as you can, in your games that you play, giving her fake names and toys that are big enough for her to play with. I don’t worry about you with her, but it’d be nice if you learned not to hug her too much…or spritz her until she gets some hair worth spritzing. 

Well, little girl, there are so many things about your personality and spirit that I could write about. You’re going to start preschool in September and you keep announcing, every time we drive by a nearby elementary school, ‘That’s the school I’ll go to when I’m five. I’ll ride my bike there and put it up against the wall!” It’s like you think you’re ready for Kindergarten – or at least riding your bike there. I think we’ll stick with preschool this Fall and I think Papa has plans to help you ride your bike there (driving and parking a few blocks away) since it’s about a 5 minute drive that isn’t bike friendly. I know you are ready to start school, and you are really going to love it, but this is all going too fast for me. 

I want to slow it down. These are the days I want to savor. Hearing you playing with your toys – you have hilarious voices for all of them or listening to your made-up songs (“I love myself. I love my tutu. I love my mama. I love when she puts me to sleep. I love my daddy….)” and just having you close.  There are moments from your life that I know you won’t remember, but I will never forget. I guess that’s what being a mama is all about. We have a couple jokes that we say to each other. One is about taking hug breaks (we take a ton of hug and smooch breaks around here) and that there should be ‘NO HUGGING DURING MY SMOOCH BREAK’ or vise versa. It’s really just a way to get some hugs and smooches in. But the other joke is that you like me to ask you to stop growing. I ask you to stop growing and you like to tell me that you’re still growing and want to grow up to be a big girl, just like me. You tell me not to be sad about it. Then you check to see if I’m done growing, if Papa is done growing and Audrey is done growing. I always end the joke by telling you that even though you’re growing, you’ll still be my baby. This joke makes you smile one of those smiles that lights up the whole world. 

Keep shining bright, my girl. 

I love you so. 

Mama

 

We Had an Extraordinary One, Folks!

audrey & maggie-6

Sometimes I get a lump in my throat when I’m feeling extraordinary lucky and thankful for the little slice of life that I’m living, and I try to savor every single thing about that moment. Today was one of those days – filled to the very brim with happiness, laughter and tons of smooches. From the moment I woke up, with Maggie whispering she loved me into my year, to now, alone and ready to do a bit of writing while everybody else sleeps, it has been a ‘I hope I don’t forget this’ type of day. Maggie told Audrey not to ‘dribble’ on her, we got some yard work done, Phil and Geneviève came to visit, and I even took a bath. (I also had my second and third cups of coffee ever in my life…)

audrey & maggie-2 audrey & maggie-4

I really needed an extraordinary day to follow up the few days of tantrums that we’ve had. I can safely say that we didn’t run into the Terrible Twos, but I think we might have a bit of the Tantrum Threes. (Honestly, after the major fit that Mags had on Wednesday, I was ready to call them the F’n Threes….is that how you even write that?) I can’t even bring myself to write about the tantrums in too much detail because they seem so incredibly ridiculous in retrospect. (I mean, how hard could it be to get dressed, go potty and put ONE sock on without hitting, peeing your pants or stomping your feet?)  It is my hope that we’re figuring out a way to be consistent with Maggie so that when she does elevate to Code Red Tantrum, she’ll know exactly what to expect from us. 

audrey & maggie-5

One of my very favorite techniques has just been, after she’s calmed down a tiny bit, to hug her and just hold her without any words until she’s ready to talk. If she talks and starts elevating again, I just start hugging her again….and Maggie, being the kid that loves physical tough, always melts into my arms. We’ve also been telling her how much we love her, even when she’s being a ‘bucket dipper’ and she seems to be surprised by that notion. Barry told her that when she’s angry and feeling upset, is when we love her the most, an idea she didn’t seem to buy, but I think it gave her some comfort. That said, tonight Kara sent a link to a very beautiful video with an essay by Katherine Center and it so moved me. You can check both out here, but I’m also adding the text to the essay so I can read it again and again.  

audrey & maggie-3audrey & maggie

WHAT I WOULD TELL HER:  (If I knew what to say.)

You are a miracle.

And I have to love you this fiercely:  So that you can feel it even after you leave for school, or even while you are asleep, or even after your childhood becomes a memory.

You’ll forget all this when you grow up.  But it’s okay.

Being a mother means having your heart broken.

And it means loving and losing and falling apart and coming back together.

And it’s the best there is.  And also, sometimes, the worst.

Sometimes you won’t have anyone to talk to.

Sometimes you’ll wonder if you’ve forgotten who you are.

But you must remember this:  What you’re doing matters.

And you have to be brave with your life so that others can be brave with theirs.

The truth is, being a woman is a gift.  Tenderness is a gift.  Intimacy is a gift.  And nurturing the good in this world is a nothing short of a privilege.

That’s why I have to love you this way.  So I can give what I have to you.  So that you can carry it in your body and pass it on.

I have watched you sleep.  I’ve kissed you a million times.  And I know something that you don’t, yet:

You are writing the story of your only life every single minute of every day.

And my greatest hope for you, sweet child, is that I can teach you how to write a good one.

Blood & Veins

maggie 3rd birthday cake

I am 33. Audrey is 3 months and Maggie is 3 years old. It seems fitting that we’re all sporting the number three in our age. Everything seems to be coming together and we’re a trifecta of goodness right now. Maggie’s birthday party was a smashing success. This was by far my favorite of  her celebrations because it was all her idea, from the parade to the people that were there. If anything, it made me love our girl so much more, and quite frankly, I wasn’t sure that was possible.  Hopefully I’ll get around to doing a birthday post because it was a fabulous day. 

 

audrey 3 months
maggie mae 3 years old

My dad and Aunt Sue showed up with their arms loaded down with instruments and hats and we were able to throw down a parade that fit Maggie’s high expectations. (Side note: I discovered that I no longer can play “A Whole New World” on the trumpet and am only limited to a scale and a little bit of “Tijuana Taxi”. The world might be a better place because of this, but I was a bit saddened. Also, my lips swell up after about ten notes.)

maggie mae parade

A couple mornings before Maggie’s birthday, we were cuddling in bed and I was hoping that she’d fall back asleep, as she often does after she crawls in with us. More often than not, she likes to talk and ‘snuggle’ and it takes me a bit of time to transition from deep sleep to full-on conversations. Thankfully Maggie recognizes this and the early morning conversations are sweet and full of love with not too many questions that require long answers. On this particular morning she was rubbing my back (I have to face away from her if I’m feeding Audrey) and chatting away. 

fidget & audrey fidget & audrey-2All the sudden she squeezes me and says “I love your veins, Mama!” and then follows it up with “I even love your blood.” I asked her to repeat herself because I wasn’t quite sure that I’d heard her correctly, but it turns out that she really was emoting over my veins and blood. One of her favorite books to read with my mom is all about the body and she has become fascinated with all parts of the human body, checking to make sure that we all have veins lately. Turns out some of the information really struck because she LOVES my veins and blood. 

maggie, mama & audrey

As funny as an anecdote this is, I took it as the biggest compliment in the world. My 3 year old daughter loves ALL of me. If she knew that I was full of guts, she’d probably tell me she loves my guts too. I love all of me, too. But lately, in this post-partum body of mine, I have been feeling a bit more jiggly around the edges. This means that I’m much more critical of myself – bouncing between feeling great and feeling bad about not being all slinky and slim. But then I check myself and check my priorities. 

mama hannah

I am a mother. I am a role model to my daughters. Yes, I want to be a thinner, less bouncy, version of ME. I’ll get there soon enough, with a bit of hard work. But the work – the eating healthy and exercising daily – is something that Maggie can be apart of. She doesn’t need to know about the chubbiness I feel and the double chin I’m trying to get rid of. She needs to see that I love my body in all shapes and sizes, that I’m happy right now and I’m still going to be happy down the road. It is important that she sees that I love me just as much as she does because a day will come, hopefully WAY down the road, that she’ll feel critical of her own body and I want her to think of me as a confident, smart,  beautiful woman. It isn’t too early to start promoting that image. 

maggie mae-2

Tonight, to speed up the process of bed time, we took a shower together. I don’t think we’ve taken a shower together since she was a baby. As we stood there together, I talked with her about all the different parts of my body that I was washing and then I encouraged her to do the same to her own body. There we were, covered in soap, chatting away in the shower….and she takes a step closer to my leg and wraps her little 3 year old arms around it and squeezes with a grunt and then proclaims….”I LOVE  YOU, MAMA!”

And I belive her with all of my heart because I love her just as much – blood, veins, and all.