Should Little Girls Have Secrets?

Molly and I stopped for pizza after an afternoon of consignment store shopping. Camp is ending this week, and I mentioned that her counselor had said there would be a party on the last day for all the parents. “I know,” she said. “Guess what puppets we have.”

“Kermit?” That’s my best and only guess as far as puppets go. Ever. I wanted to get past the guessing part of the conversation.

“I can’t tell you. It’s a secret.”

“Oh, well that’s okay,” I responded. No more guessing; that’s cool. And then I thought about it. “Well, you know, Molly, I don’t like secrets. You’re four and secrets are not okay.” In general, this rule works. When she and her friends are whispering about jumping off the bed “anyway” or emptying all the cereal boxes on the kitchen floor, the “no secrets” rule makes sense to both of us.

“But mommy, the teacher said we can’t tell you!”

“Right, but adults shouldn’t have secrets with children. I don’t like that. I know it’s your teacher…”

MOMMY! I can’t tell you! You have to wait and see!” She whined, impatient and not interested in my awkward attempt to explain why her wonderful, fun, and loving camp counselors should not ask her to not tell me about the ice cream and puppet show they are planning.

“Alright. I understand that.” I cut her pizza into smaller pieces so she could eat with her fork. There were other diners sitting close enough to hear our conversation about secret puppets. Am I crazy? Going too far–too obsessed with horrible stories on the news, on the Internet? Watching too many morbid television dramas? Should I get out more?

Probably. I know there is a popular parenting movement called “Free range parenting” that encourages children to be more self-sufficient and parents to be less overprotective in order to help build self-esteem. I know because I’ve read about it on the Internet. And it seems lovely and old-fashioned and reasonable. If you live in an old-fashioned-y town where people are lovely and reasonable. Those parents would confirm I am paranoid. And oh-my-God, am I making my child neurotic and freaked out about end-of-camp parties? Should I worry about that?

Last summer I published an interview I had done with an amazing mother and educator named Erin Runnion, founder of The Joyful Child Foundation in Memory of Samantha Runnion. During our conversation, I learned more than I could have imagined about empowering parents and children and communities–to prevent all the things I don’t want to think about.

And that’s all I could think about as Molly insisted she couldn’t break that confidence with her counselor about a lunch-time celebration. She was getting upset and clearly angry with me for not getting it.

“But Molly, the thing is that…” Sometimes adults are horrible monsters that you cannot trust or be alone with or even smile at. Sometimes grown ups might want to hurt you. Even the grown ups you know and like. But I know your counselors and I’m not really worried. I know they’re normal and nice and don’t want to hurt you. But one day that may not be the case so you should just not have secrets. Just in case. But that’s not now. Now it’s fine.

“…I want you to tell me if someone asks you to keep a secret. Even if that person is an adult. Like your teacher.” Unless it’s about a party. Or puppets. “I know you want to surprise me. And I can’t wait. Just…in general…” Like every other time but this one.

“What does ‘in gerenal’ mean?” She asked, wiping pizza grease away with her hand.

“Don’t talk with your mouth full,” I answered. “Sometimes a surprise is fine–and…but…” I wished I hadn’t brought this up because now I was stuck in my own confusion. “You can’t keep secrets from mommy. Can I have a bite of that?” Pizza places should really serve alcohol, by the way.

What do you think about little children having secrets, even the most innocent ones? How do you explain to your children the difference between a fun surprise and an inappropriate secret with an adult? Should pizza restaurants serve wine to moms in awkward conversations?

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Jesus, a Virgin, and the Gold Shoes

My daughter got a postcard in the mail today announcing the beginning of Sunday School in September and this year’s theme. We do not attend church, and I was not expecting it.

“Good God, it’s Christ the Righteous!” is what I said.

We are not religious people. I grew up Jewish, my husband, Catholic. I have never cared to be observant–I have been ashamed, annoyed, awed, inspired, and baffled by religious people of different faiths. I have rarely been envious of them. But I have praised a personal God most of my adult life.

Before I was pregnant with Molly, I loved daydreaming of what I would tell our child about God. My faith was strong. My relationship with God still is. But it is different. Much of my heart changed when I became a parent–and my faith changed in a way I didn’t anticipate. It is impossible for me to stay in the same place with God as I witness a world in which children are casualties of war; where natural disasters strike schoolhouses; and lately, I am without words for the discrimination being celebrated in the name of Jesus Christ.

I no longer have answers for the questions my almost-five-year-old daughter has or may come up with. For the first time in many years, I do not know what–and if–I want my children to believe. This does not feel awful–or even bad–as I had imagined people without faith must feel. It feels temporary, but right. It feels like the cool nighttime after a cloudless day.

I began writing this post in the midst of a big blogging conference last week. I was angrier than I am now about national events and filled with nerves about the conference. I am not a writer who does well with anger or intense anxiety, and I am glad I waited–and deleted.

I was truly nervous about attending BlogHer because it was my first. I could say that, like any virgin, I didn’t know what to expect–but I did. I expected to feel self-conscious and awkward.

One thing that helps with anxiety is shopping. One thing that helped with conference anxiety was a pair of gold ballet flats with a tiny adorable heel. They were expensive and will probably not see much of New York City streets this fall. But like all things golden, and many a pair of shoes in the movies–they promised good, magical things.

I still felt out of place among almost 5,000 bloggers. I swear–it seemed they all knew each other. And I didn’t know which sessions to pick or where the rooms were or which way the doors opened. I had to steady myself and take a deep breath many times to stay ahead of the panic.

I didn’t meet as many of the writers I admire or follow or even know on social media as I had hoped or would have liked. I don’t have many pictures with people. I walked around by myself most of the time, and there were awkward and odd moments when I felt like all eyes were on me.

I sat in one session without a familiar face anywhere, having very much to pee, noticing about 40 minutes in that there was no clear path to the door–no way to leave the packed room without walking through a tight aisle and over 30 people’s feet. So after a few false starts and having gone over my escape route in my mind, I picked up my many bags from the expo hall visits and whispered “excuse me,” “I’m sorry,” “oops” all the way to the door–when I realized I’d left my purse under my chair. Sigh.

Each day I was close to giving in to my fear, but my need to see things through forced me to go–that and that my alternative was staying home with my children. And I am grateful for the courage.

I was reminded how much I adore the community of bloggers I am fortunate to be a part of in this city, and how quickly and easily and miraculously I felt like myself among a sea of beautiful, smart people. There are moments of quality conversation with understanding friends that I would have never had otherwise. There are a few funny, warm and new friends I can’t wait to know better.

And as the summer nights become shorter, as we sign up for autumn swimming classes and look into ballet schedules and check our list of necessary supplies, I continue to wade through my insecurities, all my best intentions, my unsteady faith–with hope and a burning need to soon, again, bring out my golden shoes.

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Clothes Make the Woman…Anxious

I completely screwed up this morning and told Molly as she was scooting out the door for camp that our babysitter would be picking her up today.

Rule number one when delivering change-of-pick-up news to kids: give them some warning. One would think I’ve learned this by now, given our experiences with epic preschool pickup meltdowns–Molly became utterly distraught at school more than once when she learned she was going home with me rather than our neighbor. You heard that right.

(Rule number two is always bring snacks to a pick-up. And I have failed at that as well.)

So to avoid further trauma as she was leaving today, I relented. I would pick her up at camp and I would cancel the work plans I had made. So smart.

This change left me with a bit of time this morning. Most of which I spent drinking coffee and on Twitter.

There is a great deal of discussion on social media right now about what to wear at the upcoming BlogHer conference. Appropriate dress is a big deal, and this is not welcome news to me. Should I have realized this earlier? Yes. Don’t I know that when fashion, women, and New York City come together, it’s a big deal? I guess I should have, but given that I wore a bathing suit cover-up as a dress yesterday, fashion and I often have missed connections.

I just checked my closet against all the cute outfits I’ve been seeing in posts about “what to bring to BlogHer.” Thank you, friends and fellow bloggers, for posting where you found these great and lovely items, because I am going to be dressed exactly like you now. That’s won’t be weird, will it?

I have a lot of clothes. And a very messy closet. But a lot of nice clothes. And shoes. And bags. The problem is that I have no idea how to put things together so that they look as cute on me as they did on the mannequin in the store when I bought them.

This is a historical problem for me. At the last moment, I think: I have nothing to wear. I am always, have always been, late for school, work, events because of wardrobe drama. I once left my office midday, went shopping, and returned to work in an entirely different outfit. Because I hated what I was wearing.

And as I desperately examine my wardrobe, I am stung with the realization that not only do I have no clue how to wear what I have, but I don’t know how to be in the clothing I have. How to be who I am. It’s rarely a woman’s outfit I admire as much as her confidence, her way. My frustration is not with clothes but with social situations. Always self-conscious, I rarely feel comfortable in my own skin, let alone my clothing.

And a huge conference is largely about being with people. And meeting them. And some may not like me. Or even talk to me.

Yes I should get therapy for this; I’ve written about this before. Because BlogHer is a couple of weeks away, though, let’s assume I won’t be making much progress. So if anyone can tell me what to wear with this top–that looked really cute on the tall plastic model at J.Crew but seems to match nothing I own–I will buy you a drink.

More than anything, I am grateful that my first BlogHer conference will be here in Manhattan. This is my city, my refuge, my comfort zone. And I can go home and change.

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One Week, Summer

We made a last-minute decision to get away this summer. My husband is nostalgic and romantic about family vacations. I am less enthusiastic. But it is hard to argue.

We had a wonderful, stressful, busy, hot week in Greenport, New York. Go there. It’s beach-y and laid back and sophisticated at the same time–actually don’t go. Less traffic. You’ll hate it. I’ll go and tell you how it was.

Last year, we went to the beach for a few days. You may remember my moaning about this. I was a bit undone by our trip with two-year-old twins and our four year old. Going away with two three year olds and an almost five year old is so, so, so much–exactly the same.  It’s not easier. It was work from the packing to the sunscreen applications to the unpacking. My mother was with us, so we got out a few nights after the kids finally passed out on a sofa, or in someone’s bed. Like home.

We went to beaches, a farm, many stores, restaurants and the aquarium in Riverhead, New York. Go there. For real. Forget what I said because there are sharks. Really big sharks. Sharks!

We rode a miniature train built by one local man, to fulfill his dream, on his expansive property. It is legendary apparently, and also closing this year. To see your little boy on a miniature train, traveling its antique tracks, through land and props set up to entertain and bring only joy and wonder is magic. And corny. Maybe creepy. Still magic.

We celebrated the 4th of July with good friends, a grill and a poop incident. The kids were in bed before the fireworks, so the only trauma involved myself cleaning up the poop incident.

We celebrated vacation, family, children, dancing too close to the water. Summer itself.

I washed our sand-encrusted bathing suits and towels more times than necessary with the provided laundry detergent. It smelled like a mid-summer evening. I can put my nose to our clothing still and remember fireflies and sailboats. My friends, in-unit laundry is a luxury on vacation–I live in New York City. I did laundry each night just to hear that lovely click of the water turning on, the bang-bang turning of the dryer.

One night we were so tired that we watched the local news instead of drinking wine on the porch. Three children had drowned in a yacht accident off Long Island with their parents on board. My husband and I sat side by side on the small, antique sofa and didn’t look at each other. My anxiety kicked in. I checked the kids, poured a glass of wine and still couldn’t sleep that night.

Daily, our children demanded ice cream and toys. They cried when they couldn’t have what they wanted, and we explained how lucky they are to have vacation and ice cream and toys. And we bought them things because it made them giggle and smile and scream with excitement.

We rode an antique carousel in town about a thousand times. At $2 a ticket. Children do not tire of moving horses painted with bright colors. The game of running for a place in line, handing paper tickets, picking our favorite horses became unbeatable. Always the same, always the possibility and promise of something new.

And we went around and around. Like any good ride will do.

No part of this trip was sponsored in any way. All opinions are my own. For more information on where we stayed, see Great Things.

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Guest Post: Boys Don’t Grow Up

In honor of Father’s Day, and in honor of dads everywhere, Mama One to Three is happy to have its second guest poster and a new feature on this website. “Dad Was Here” will introduce my brave readers to some very awesome, funny, hostile and/or profane dads that it is my pleasure to already know. Also some to whom I owe money.  

Warning: If reading about penises makes you uncomfortable, you might want to avoid this post. And the Internet.

I was standing in waist deep water next to my sister-in-law, and my three-year-old nephew Sam was preparing to jump into the pool to splash us.

Sam crouched down, wrinkled his face and moved his arms back. Just as he was about to jump, he stopped and stared at my belly. A few seconds passed silently, and he said, “Uncle Sean, why do you have a penis in your belly?”

Sam is a curious, sophisticated toddler; and he knows a penis in the belly when he sees one. I tried to stifle my laughter while I said to my sister-in-law, “You’re going to have to answer this one.”

She suppressed her giggles long enough to say, “Oh, honey, that’s not Uncle Sean’s penis.  He just has a big belly button.  It’s called an ‘outie.'” And to add to this impromptu teaching moment, she asked, “That’s a funny name isn’t it, Sam?”

Sam didn’t seem to find it funny at all. And knowing how guys can be about these things, he may have also felt cheated. I mean, this wasn’t just about size. We were talking about quantity.

Clearly shocked, perhaps a little disappointed in his mother’s explanation, Sam stood by the poolside trying to make sense of it. I don’t blame the kid. Having just learned about anatomy (him, not me), discovering a second penis must have seemed like discovering a second sun in the sky. Finally, and without further questioning, he found the courage to jump in the pool. Smartly, he made sure to jump toward his mom and away from his two-penis uncle.

When my wife, Phoebe, went to say goodnight to Sam that evening, he asked her, “Does Uncle Sean really have a penis in his belly?” Oh that poor kid, still trying to figure out why he only has one, when his uncle–and were there others?!–might be packing two or more. Phoebe assured Sam that I also only have one and tucked him into his bed. Quickly.

Of course, when Phoebe came back downstairs, she had to relay Sam’s concern, and there was much talk and laughter about my ‘outie.’  I like to think I am a good sport; so I joined in the fun making. But much of the comedy was lost on me and my descended-from-cave-men ego. I’m a man after all. I can take only so much kidding about my penis–either penis. Or any penis. You know what I mean.

For the record, I only have one. I recently had hernia surgery to remove the “Extra Willy” (I may or may not have referred to it as such once or twice). I’ve had my original penis for years, and overall, I am quite satisfied with it. But to be fair to young Sam, I can admit that the possibilities of adding a spare one intrigue me. Not that I’ve thought of it before all this. And aside from the awkward moments I might endure at the pool this summer, I like to imagine the looks of admiration I’d get in the gym locker room.

Sean Teare is a husband and father of a son and daughter.  His children are young enough that they want to hang out with him, but old enough that he actually wants to hang out with them.  He works in healthcare as time allows. 

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At Great Risk of “Rapture, Blister, Burn”

Had I known I could work out my mother issues by reviewing plays, I would have saved money on therapy. Gina Gionfriddo’s new play (at Playwrights Horizons through June 24; directed by Peter DuBois) webs the lives of several disparate women, and one hapless man, around family, career and satisfaction.

Amy Brenneman plays a woman who has left the big city for life on a smaller scale as she returns to her hometown to live with her whip smart and endearing mother–oh my god, wait. That was Judging Amy.

Let’s see. In Rapture, Blister, Burn, Amy Brenneman plays a woman who has left the big city for life on a smaller scale as she… Ah well.

Amy Brenneman is magnetic as Catherine. She and her dynamite, elderly, no-fear mother, Alice (played by Beth Dixen), are the only characters with whom I’d want to have a cocktail. And there are indeed many opportunities to share drinks, opinions and secrets here–all while discussing the successes and failures of the second wave of feminism.

Having come home to teach and take care of Alice–leaving, presumably, an unholy share of sadness and desperation behind in New York–Cathy conducts a seminar in her mother’s home for two students: her old grad school classmate and once-romantic-rival Gwen (Kellie Overbey) and Gwen’s daring, liberated, confused babysitter, Avery (Virginia Kull).

With Alice participating in the drinking and the ruminating, we get the whole garbled, messy, contradictory and, in so many ways, by now, cliché offerings of The Women’s Movement from four women of three generations. Did it free women to explore their sexuality, individuality, and opportunities to live outside domesticity? Or does it steal happiness from women, perpetuating the lie that a good career can replace, or at least postpone, a husband and family?

Every woman I know understands at some point the vicious joke of Women’s Liberation is that we cannot have it all without great sacrifice. Many, however, like Gwen, can’t say it out loud.

So should we be surprised that an aging and old-fashioned mother; her uber-driven, single, lonely 42-year-old daughter; the recovering alcoholic, chatty, bitter, stay-at-home mom; and the “easy,” super-smart-but-willing-to-throw-it-away-for-a-boy 21-year-old co-ed have experiences and views that clash into each other’s with the silent power of a brewing storm?

For the first half of the play I craved a turning point. Four women discussing how Women’s Liberation has either cursed them or freed them or some of both is how all of my Moms Nights Out end up. I needed something from the stage to shake me out of my increasingly morbid identification with these women–you were right, Betty Friedan, you were right! I DO want something more than my husband and my children and my home!

And just how Don (Lee Tergesen)–the clearly unworthy center of the escalating tension between Cathy and Gwen–got to be in that unlikely spot is the mixer in this dirty martini.

Women expend tremendous otherwise useful energy thinking about the lives we could have or should have been living while we were, instead, following our destinies. At least the play says so. The only male character, Don, is the only character not aching for the “life not lived,” as Gwen puts it. But how many of us would grab a dangerously seductive opportunity to switch it up a bit?

Gwen’s ambition is the subterranean basement in her house of disappointment–Don is a loser; her “marriage fix” baby didn’t deliver the goods; her favored son, Julian, will eventually leave her. The deal with the devil comes in the form of a drunk phone call from Cathy. From that conversation, which has taken place before the play begins, Gwen maps out a new life for herself. And Cathy. And Don. And Julian. And Alice.

Remarkably, everyone is willing to move into their new places in this “what might have been” scenario. Predictably, the reality of being responsible for other people’s happiness, or even one’s own, is crushing. Leave the specter of the past’s promises alone on its high shelf. To bring it down is to risk rapture, blister and burn.

The fallout is brutal and comforting, both. For Cathy, a new beginning with the old trappings, once again, is in order. Feminism, life, necessity collide or, at least, have colluded. And isn’t that all of our stories–what is freedom but to lift the veil on sweet, cruel irony? To be free we must embrace our limitations; to be happy standing still, we must realize we have wings.

Like Cathy, Gwen, Alice and Avery, we define ourselves with the decisions we’ve made. And we live usefully within them, or we learn to live with a regret so deep we are swaddled in it.

We call it what serves us: feminism or fate. Either way, we move on to the next right thing with hope and the misguided belief we can go back again. Only a redirection from the loving and sage Tyne Daly might otherwise change our minds.

I was given tickets for review purposes from the wonderful people at Playtime! and through my friends at MamaDrama. Opinions are, as always, my own. 

Playtime! provides parents with affordable, incredible childcare while they attend remarkable New York City theater. While I saw the show, my two girls enjoyed games, art, play and snacks with the talented and kind artist-sitters from Sitters Studio. We all had an enlightening day. 


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The Dynamics of Three

One recent afternoon, as we were all winding down at home after school pick-up, Molly said to me, “You know what mommy?” And I expected an observation to come forth along the lines of “Spiders have an ‘abdomen.’ That’s where their guts are,” or “Birds bathe in puddles, then dry off in the sand.”

Instead I got, thought out and calmly perceived: “You know what mommy? You are only nice to Henry and not us.”

Okay. I asked why she thought that; my own theories were beginning to bubble.

I love all my children equally. This phenomenon is impossible to imagine before a second child is in the picture, and difficult to explain to someone anticipating a second child’s birth. We all worry we will somehow be unable to love any child as much as we love our first. And that does not happen. Love expands; it is time and attention we have to divide. And those are never equal.

Was that becoming obvious to my oldest?

Molly is the oldest by only 19 months. She asks sophisticated questions about where squirrels go in the rain. She loves treats, floaty dresses, her sister, and her brother. In that order. And she loves me “to that number that doesn’t end.” She wrinkles her face up when something doesn’t make sense, and twirls her long hair absentmindedly until it tangles. She gets excited each morning for school and never wants to be late. But she insists on wearing the ribbon flats that fall off her feet and short sleeves on the coldest days; she is bossy, moody, and insistent, exhausting all of us.

She is most like her mother. She wakes in the middle of the night asking about her playdate the next afternoon. Her sensitivity and intuition are painful. Sensitive girls notice, even at four years old, when friends make plans without them. Like magic though, a trip to Starbucks has can mend her broken heart. As compassionate as she is emotional, Molly is shaken to tears if she thinks her brother or sister will be left behind.

And Ellie may one day be that friend who leaves you wondering where her affection suddenly went. She’s full of dancing and kisses and jumping and explosive moments of fist pounding. She hasn’t any doubt the world will give her all the things she wants–lip gloss, cookies, a Barbie movie at bedtime, balloons climbing above the trees.

She’s clever and knows her audience; it is almost impossible to be angry with her as she raises her eyebrows and explains why she will not face consequences for refusing to put away toys. Ellie imitates everything her older sister does, yet it is obvious that she will very soon be the leader of the three. She speaks in paragraphs, not sentences, and will repeat her point until acknowledged just the way she wants. Her serious mood melts into giggles at the suggestion of a game of “I’m gonna get you.”

And Henry is the hardest to describe. Is it because he’s a boy I treat him differently? His sisters have a thickness to their bond, calling to each other from different rooms. They whisper and laugh the way little boys just don’t know how. Henry is slower to reach physical milestones and insecure in his abilities to balance and climb. Some days he gives everything to his physical and occupational therapy sessions; sometimes he hides in his room and refuses to participate.

The nannies in our neighborhood call him “handsome.” Charming and conservative with his smiles, he watches his peers on the playground before inching closer. But Henry follows the older boys on scooters–he’s almost as fast, and he sings to himself loudly as he speeds along. His favorite toy, “tiny bear,” is tattered, ripped and in every way a mess. This doesn’t stop him from cuddling and talking to it, rubbing its nubby arm while he falls asleep each night.

I understand why Molly thinks I am nicer to Henry. He is my baby while the girls are independent in their attitudes and ways. Minor scrapes and bumps send him crying to me, and as much as I demand he “shake it off”–I sort of like comforting him.

I am easier on him because he has unpredictable tantrums–and unlike the girls, he is completely unreachable when he is having a fit. When I need to be out the door with three children, I will do anything to avoid more screaming. Henry is, in some ways, the most difficult to keep happy. But he collapses easily into a hug and rests his head on my shoulder.

They separate themselves almost naturally. The girls play princess or “mommy” to their baby dolls. They take care of things, put order to their spaces and each other. Henry can drift into a world of trains and tracks and engines for hours by himself on the floor; there are names and places only he knows.

So Molly was reacting to something that had happened just a few minutes early that day. Henry was overtired and impossible, having half-napped in the stroller. I offered him the sofa or his bed to lie down, trying to calm everyone before baths and dinner. There was a point during this when I yelled at Molly “super loud.” I am sure this happened but I can’t recall why or when. I never want to be nice to one and not another. But it happens here. I don’t plan on spending more time with one child. I know this happens as well, and too often. The dynamics of three children are difficult for all of us to navigate through.

Each evening we sit together, watching a movie. The three fight over who sits next to me and where. One of the kids will remind me to put my phone away.

They point out who got an extra cookie, didn’t clean up, deserves to go to bed early. Sometimes I laugh at how bold and exacting their sense of justice is. Mostly I respond by reminding them I’m in charge. Because like them, I imagine the world the way I’d like it.

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One Year

There was a beginning to all of this. It was one year ago, and a world away. It was 10 feet from where I am typing now.

Being the over-thinking, sentimental–overly dramatic–person that I am, milestones such as anniversaries uniquely satisfy my craving to examine, regret, and wonder at the bizarre details of life.

This year, unlike most years, I did not have one or more babies; we did not move; no one changed jobs; and we didn’t deal with a major renovation, moldy wall situation, mice and/or bedbugs. (It would seem I have enough reason to celebrate right here.)

One year ago, I came back to writing and back to myself.  It was one year after we moved back to Manhattan. I was angry and frustrated. We had moved into a beautiful apartment and discovered bed bugs. My life was physically upside down–washed, dried and in sealed garbage bags; it mirrored my emotional confusion. Much of life was exactly what I had dreamed (bugs excepted)–I was back in my city, my family was thriving. Our friends and community were growing. And I was still chasing something that had long ago belonged to me. Once, I had been a writer; I had owned the frustration of demanding inspiration that won’t come, and the perfect joy of having given it all to the page. I was chasing something that hadn’t actually escaped.

Over the years, on the way back to writing, I have tried different ventures: tee shirt designer; commercial actor; dog groomer (this one never blossomed passed my initial research); nutritionist; online college instructor.

Although those were not careers I was meant for, I understand where my anxious searching takes root. I was, and am, always looking for a way in. I need to connect with people. Sometimes for comfort. Sometimes for validation. Often for laughter. Always to revive in me the knowledge that we are in this world together for reasons, for this moment in time.

Once, the work and craft and mystery and narrative of poetry connected me to the world and to my spirit. I have said I am a writer for as long as I can remember–in college, in graduate school, throughout my career, and then after my children were born when I was no longer working or writing. There was a long space in which I did not feel like a writer–telling stories–my story–with an audience and the hope of immortality in mind.

So one year ago, I sat in my living room, my children nowhere near sleep, surrounded by garbage bags holding our possessions, without any end to the bug trauma in sight, and I felt hopeless and without options. And I decided to go “live” with the blog I had been drafting for months. And this blog has given me, to an oddly large degree, power and hope. It has given me a world I never suspected–other moms, dads, writers and activists. My friends from blogging are truly friends. I think often of the women I wrote to and met and leaned on for advice. A few offered enormous kindness by just answering my emails. Several gave me opportunities to write for their websites. They continue to prove to me how relevant our small efforts are to both friends and strangers.

This is just a blog. Living proof of my family’s life in the city–our three small children  growing up with playdates and preschool and green markets; a marriage always tested and glued back together by humor, humility and desperation; a journey through the imperfection of motherhood; and an honest attempt to find those brightest stars in the dark skies.

And in that, are the life and the anniversary I savor.

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Wordless Wednesday: Stopping at the End the Day

We had a tough day here, after a very long night. My husband is away. I’m anxious and tired. Tonight ended with frustration and screaming and fighting over going to sleep.

Once Henry finally went to bed at 10:00, I felt the familiar stab after a bad day. I closed my eyes and thought about my yelling when Molly got pink lipgloss all over the white rug, and when Ellie laughed in my face as I told her it was bed time. I turned on the television. I was caught suddenly by something I saw: a mattress commercial during which The Beatles’ “In My Life” plays. Damn you, cheesy mattress company. Now I have to sob and post all these pictures. Because I wasn’t my best today. Because I was preoccupied with work and cleaning up and having some quiet in the apartment. Because my children should never go to bed sad. Because I love them more.

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The Babies Are Three and My Reunion Looms

People said this would happen: time would accelerate to an unpalatable pace once we had kids. I didn’t really believe them because these were the same people that told me the weight would “melt” off once the baby was born.

My babies turned three years old last week. My five-pound early babies can dress themselves (almost), use the potty (one of them), and offer their opinions on just about everything (constantly).

Ellie and Henry; three years old.

April 2012. Lunch outside.

As well, my 20-year college reunion is coming up quickly. How speedily the years go by; yet how little time has passed when I think of who I was 20 years ago, who I am now. The space of so many years collapses upon itself: I am still insecure at parties, still think too much about my weight, still cherish a late night with wine and girlfriends. And I still love some of the same people. I suppose that is the measure of time well spent.

A month before Molly’s first birthday, we took a trip to Mystic, Connecticut. The year had been long and dark at times for me–my husband and I fought a lot, and I cried over nothing often. Getting away to a room beside the river was a needed fix. Cover your ears if you are squeamish, but I am pretty sure this is where the twins were conceived.

Beer and milk bottles. Irish pub, Mystic, Conn. August 2008.

Ducks! Mystic, Conn. August 2008.

We found out I was pregnant the morning of Molly’s first birthday party (which was at an Irish bar of course). I remember thinking how grown up all the little ones looked–barely walking, shoving fists of cake in their mouths, still weaning from the boob. We were in a rush for them to become toddlers. What did I know as a mother of one?

Molly's first birthday. September 2008. Just found out we are expecting. We don't know it's with twins.

Molly was 19 months old when the twins were born. We brought Ellie home first with us and Henry the next day. It was cold and raining, and in our excitement, delirium and frazzled state of being, I forgot to bring clothes with us to the hospital–not just his “coming home outfit,” but any clothes.  The stellar nurses in Cornell’s Continuing Care Nursery put kimono shirts on Henry’s legs and layered him with blankets.

The twins were tiny; Molly was enormous to us. Just a year and one-half, and she looked different to me when we came back from the hospital. I couldn’t imagine her any bigger or smarter or prettier. She was almost a little girl. What did I know?

And they are home. April 2009.

Molly about 18 months, walking our late dog, Daisy.

I hope you can pardon the random arrangement of photos in this post. In my mind it was like this–we were parents of one baby whom we rocked to sleep in the glider each night; then there were three babies in diapers, each needing to be rocked and comforted. And then a memory of learning to nurse, of strapping Molly in her infant carseat, or of lying in bed with morning sickness comes in. Or of telling our families we are having twins when we could barely say the words ourselves.

Suddenly we are the parents of three little children who either know how, or are learning to write their names coherently and who ask for their breakfast on their favorite plates.

Ellie, Molly, Henry. The twins had been home for a few days.

I was early pregnant with the twins; Molly was just a year.

And then I am 21 again, at college graduation. Hungover from Senior Week, scared for the future, wanting with naive desperation to change everything about my world and myself. Saying goodbyes on a vast lawn in the shadow of centuries-old buildings, promising to keep in touch. Waiting for inspiration to begin my new adult life, not realizing my desire is always, even then, for things to stay the same. What did I know?

We are waiting now to hear about kindergarten for September. I am checking the mail with ferocious anticipation–as I did once for college acceptances, then from graduate schools. Nothing has come. But I am receiving notices of the reunion this June. Pictured in one brochure are alumni reliving the good times, renewing friendships and revisiting those places that haunt the memory for decades. I will not be at my reunion; a dear friend from college is having a baby and I want to be there instead. The past and the present occupy the same space at times.

April 2012

This week I signed a writing contract, I wrote a scathing email to the Department of Education; I sat with my three year olds on a stoop eating bagels and cream cheese; I napped as the sun was setting and my husband bathed the kids; I sent a note of sympathy that will change nothing; and I dreamed, oddly, of the black Mustang I drove throughout college.

As I write, alone in my kitchen this warm Saturday afternoon, NPR is on in the background; specifically, Paul Simon is singing “Still Crazy After All These Years.” And that is my point.

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