“We are children building a sand castle. We embellish it with beautiful shells, bits of driftwood, and pieces of colored glass. The castle is ours, off limits to others. We’re willing to attack if others threaten to hurt it. Yet despite all our attachment, we know that the tide will inevitably come in and sweep the sand castle away. The trick is to enjoy it fully but without clinging, and when the time comes, let it dissolve back into the sea.” ~Pema Chodron
“Mom! Mom! Maaaaaahhh-ummmmmm! Come here!”
I know that Mom. Its distinct tone, volume and urgency mean one thing: Dash is doing something he shouldn’t be doing. Despite her persistence, I can tell it’s slightly less urgent than a danger call, so I walk instead of run to her bedroom. At this point, what’s another scribble on the wall or an attempt to change his own diaper. I’m practically at the “Here’s a wipe, help yourself” stage anyway.
I walk in the room and for one tiny second, I panic. Lainey’s baby book is open on the bed, several pages torn–some completely detached from the book, pictures strewn about, a baby announcement crumpled and tossed aside, an envelope, a birthday invitation, a Christmas card, a kindergarten drawing all removed from their vault and scattered on the floor, their value insignificant to a little brother whose manifesto is Explore the World, No Holds Barred!
He looks up, deer in the headlights, pauses for his famous “So what ya gonna do about this?” staredown, and then he grins–devilishly, deliciously, Dashly.
I relax. I am frustrated by the mess but not devastated by his choice of curiosity direction. I put a lot of time into that baby book, its binding stretched into an obtuse angle from all the extra pages I slipped in, especially the first two years, of every new thing she said and saw and did and amazed me with. It’s no wonder it grabbed his attention.
“Oh no no no, baby,” I gently scold as I scoop up the baby book and begin collecting its lost treasures from the floor. “That’s very special. That’s sister’s book–you have one too. We’re gentle to our special books.”
It takes me a while to patch everything back together and tape the ripped pages in place and in doing so I peruse Year One, full of letters to my daughter and documented facts that expand well beyond the provided lines of the “I am 9 Months, Watch Me Grow!” page. Looking at the microscopic handwriting that curls around the sides of pages, I can practically feel my desperation–Write fast! Write it all! Remember everything! Time is slipping!
I am 9 Months, Watch Me Grow!
You recognize where noises come from now, and you turn to look.
You point to the eyes on your stuffed animals.
A lady at Doc’s restaurant came over to talk to you last week, and when she said “Bye!” you looked right at her and said “Ba.”
You take a phone and hold it up to your ear–smart girl!
You started crawling (February 8).
You use drawer pulls to pull yourself up to a standing position.
…and it goes on. And on. And on. For one month of memories.
I flip through a few more pages to find a tooth chart with every line of “Dates Teeth First Appeared” not only filled in but–I kid you not–accurately cross-referenced with corresponding numbers on a full mouth diagram. There is an asterisk next to Tooth #13 and a follow-up note at the bottom of the page: “Daddy found this tooth and Mommy missed it. First time that’s happened.”
I have one thing to say about all of this: Holy. Shit.
Okay, so I was a bit of a mom nerd (was/am–tomato/tomahto) and apparently had a heck of a lot of time back then. But there’s more to this story, a learned experience that comes not only from having three kids and less time but from new understanding about how I want to raise my kids, how my motherhood brain ticks, how I want my motherhood brain to tick.
My emotional genealogy has the odds stacked against it: a legacy of feely feelers on both sides of my family–moms who mourned baby days gone, preachers who spun lessons from their family tales and made congregations weep from the sentimentality of it all, cryers who attribute their inherited sap gene to the family name–we’re CRY-dermans for God’s sake–and proud of it.
Understanding the joy of motherhood and having an acute awareness of how precious these baby days are came before I even had children because I watched and listened to my own mother. She still describes her reaction to a recurring dream that we are little again as palpable heartache–“When I wake up and realize it was just a dream–that those days are gone–I can barely catch my breath.”
I have seized the day and sucked the marrow out of the baby days like they’re a last supper, and somewhere along the way, I got tired of feeling like they were. Like I’d never hug my baby at 20 months and 16 days old again.
There is a difference between having an awareness that time is fleeting and having anxiety that time is fleeting, and the latter is born out of the same fear of scarcity that makes women panicky for their opportunities in life. There are only so many chances–get it because another woman will. There are only so many baby days–soak them in because you’ll never feel this happiness again. Lies, lies, fear and lies.
The truth is, time is moving just as quickly as it moved 100 years ago–as quickly as it moved for our mothers and their mothers and their mother’s mothers–60 minutes to an hour, 24 hours to a day.
Last year, after accepting that we were done having kids, cleaning the baby clothes out of the attic and tucking Lainey’s kindergarten projects in a safe place to save forever, I challenged myself on the language I use and the terminology that folds over and over in my mind and heart when reflecting on my kids’ childhood. They’ll never be this little again. Time is fleeting. We’re done with 6-9 months clothes. Toddler days are over, soak up the preschool ones! Never, fleeting, done, over. Scarcity much? I’ve worked hard to replace these words with powerful, progressive ones in my motherhood vocabulary–growing, moving, learning, blooming–and take great pride and pleasure in the opportunity of forward movement, the gift of time and more time.
I am sentimental. I always will be. As the great Chinese philosophers said, “You can drain the sap from a young tree, but still a sapling she’ll be.” Okay, I made that up. There’s an ache in my heart though–as it probably exists in yours too–for the way I yearn to hang on to who my babies are right now. I will always take lots of pictures, keep baby books and hug my littles with a thought to my future self who’ll miss this very moment on this very day. I can understand a bit of the emptiness my mother feels when awakening from a dream and realizing we are not with her, attached to her, holding her hand and nestling into her neck where we will stay for a long but very short time before we are not there. After three kids, I know now more than ever just how quickly time and baby talk and that first pair of Stride Rites lasts. But my awareness is less desperate now. Less babyhood hoarder, more “well this is nice.” Just the other day, Brett gave a little tug on Dash’s pajamas to stretch them into prolonged wearability and noted, “Seriously, Dash was a baby for what–like, three days?” I calmly smiled, a strategy in my self therapy for accepting time. “That he was,” I replied.
I think about that Pema Chodron quote the other night as I walk with my kids on the beach. The sky is cloudless, the gulf is wild, the air is thick with the taste of salt. We walk first on the dry, softer sand where footprints last longer, but the adventure of the water calls them and they are soon skimming the sea foam with their feet, the tiny imprints of them quickly washed away by the tide.
Yet despite all our attachment, we know that the tide will inevitably come in and sweep the sand castle away. The trick is to enjoy it fully but without clinging, and when the time comes, let it dissolve back into the sea.
Each of my kids finds their rhythm and place along the shore. Lainey runs ahead, practicing her cartwheels, the silhouette of her kicking feet against ombre sky outlined by the sun’s glow. Nella switches predictably from close and protected by my side to confident bursts of exploration–right into the water, right toward the waves. “Be careful!” I shout while I worry while I smile while I beam while I trust. Dash, no doubt, heads for the rocks where he climbs and falls and climbs again.
I am wary of the current. I am watchful of their movements. I am content in this moment, on this beach, with these babies, these children, these people.
I don’t ever want to be stuck at the base of a sandcastle, so sad that it’s washing out to sea, that I don’t notice what’s happening. The tides! They move! They take that sand and push it up the coast and throw it upon new shores for new castles. I want to move with the tide. I want to swim with my children. I want to celebrate all the shores, all the castles. Over time, tides trace the outline of shores that shape continents.
I want my children to know that I love them not because I remember when their left lateral incisor came in but because I walked with them up the coast. Because I cheered for them when they moved a little quicker than my desired pace. Because I swam with them when the seas got rough.
My incentive for enjoying these beautiful days of having kids close to my side is not “Time is short” but rather “Time is forever.”
I am a sandcastle builder. I am a shore traveler. I am a mom.
I slide Lainey’s baby book, now taped and patched and full of a bit more character–as if crazy mom who documented fingernail growth wasn’t character enough–back onto the shelf next to Nella’s and Dash’s. I am thankful for the memories they hold, preserved in loose pages that fall out and get tucked back in where they belong.
As for documenting the important stuff, I’ve figured that one out too.
Dash’s Tooth Chart:














I really and truly appreciate your last picture, the entry in to dash’s book. I did such a terrible job of keeping up with the tooth explosion for my third baby and this makes me feel better. Less alone.
It does remind me to get back at finishing his baby book before baby #4 arrives in just a little over a month. ��
Oh man! I know you are going to get several comments just like this BUT…this was just what I needed to hear today. Thank you, as always, for your brilliant words. Xoxo
Beautiful thoughts. We are helping my in-laws move & I noticed how attached my father-in-law is to “stuff.” He is holding on to things that mean so much to his past. His high school sports glory days are long gone. I couldn’t help but think that I don’t want to hold on to every little thing that reminds me of how awesome I used to be, I want to put my energy into being awesome now! Great thoughts on motherhood and moving along. Love this post!
“time is forever”. yes this. fleeting, beautiful, messy, heartbreakingly forever firsts. here’s to us mamas who are learning to sink into our place as tide markers.
I am sitting in my work training crying like a baby.
There is something different with your writing lately, I can’t put my finger on it–but you’re putting out good stuff right now. It’s always been good, but this is on a new level.
how incredibly beautiful this post was. thank you for sharing š
This post, wow. So eloquently put, so beautiful. I am also striving towards this idea of fulling living in the time and feeling boundless. What a wonderful thing! What a beautiful soul
I am an obsessive memory capturer like yourself. In fact, I almost attribute my compulsion to you as I grew up in college yearning to be a mother that blogged and photographed and captured every.single.thing. Now my child is turning 2 and I am finally letting go that that is just not reality for me. Thank you for this post!
I seriously feel like I could have wrote this myself. I too have a toddler with 2 older kids (8,7) and just now have come to the realization that I am going to enjoy the present and remember the past with a smile. I think all moms should feel so lucky to watch their precious children grow and not try to live in the past.
My Milly’s tooth chart looks pretty much the same. I might have wrote in the first 2 and thats all š
Lovely post. And it reminds me of this:
Time is too slow for those who wait, too swift for those who fear, too long for those who grieve, too short for those who rejoice, but for those who love, time is eternity.
Henry Van Dyke
Checking in to say lovely post, Lady K! My ears are leaking over here. Hope everything is fine and dandy with you and your three gorgeous lovelies. Take care, and keep on keeping on.
I’m not even a mom, and I just appreciate this post so much. Last week, my Florida friend came to visit me in Indiana, and I mourned her being gone before she even arrived.
Me: “OH MY GOSH! ONE WEEK FROM TODAY I’LL BE SAYING GOODBYE TO YOU AT THE AIRPORT!” (Insert panicked looking emogee)
Her: “Jenna, I’m not even there yet! Relax! haha”
Even with my 2 year old nephew Eli, who has the sweetest, highest-pitch voice ever, I get anxious when he speaks. “How much longer do you think he’ll talk like that? I hope he has a high voice forever, even when he’s 20. I just love him so much.” And then come the tears.
It’s good that I live in the moment, but the tick tick tock makes me anxious sometimes. Thank you for the post. I really love it.
yes yes yes!
Kelle, I have been reading your blog for 3 years. While I enjoyed your posts I have never been inspired to comment. This post was amazingly beautiful and inspiration. I truly appreciate your talent.
A toothchart? I never kept one of those. I did manage to keep a few of their first milestones onto a baby book but stopped. Thanks to your post, I don’t feel bad about it.
Beautifully written. Thank you.
Deep sigh. Such a beautiful perspective.
Super duper beautiful.
Homerun post, Kelle!!! As a mom who is a little bit farther down the mother road from you, let me assure you: Mothering just keeps getting richer and more meaningful as the kids grow up! It is sometimes even more enjoyable as they get older. Although you have to let go of some things of your kid’s babyhood, the things that are coming up for you are just as great!!! You are a terrific mom – What blessed kiddos you have š
Just read this on another blog and had to share: http://themighty.com/2014/11/when-a-cashier-reminded-me-my-son-has-down-syndrome/
this is so beautiful! The sandcastle analogy and the pictures made my day today :). thank you!!!
So many emotions…sadness, joy, wonder, loneliness, pride, love, innocence…the journey of one’s child is so magical at every stage. While I adore the grown man my son has become I long for that little boy so many years ago when I and his father were his world. It is indeed so fleeting and every stage is precious…you just never want to let go.
I was frantic for a while about my second child’s babyhood, knowing it was my ‘last time’. But she’s almost out of it now and instead of upset I am feeling relieved. I am TIRED of babies and really excited about having children. I totally loved the past 5 1/2 years and soaked it up, but I’ll be so happy when I no longer have to change another diaper again…
Thank you – you always have such a magical way of expressing feelings that others can immediately relate to. I so want to be where you are right now, able to move into that mental place. Sadly I am sitting with the lengthy and difficult decision of should we have a third or not? Will she be my last or not? Will this be the last time that….? So hard to move on yet so, so aware of the importance of being here right now. Thank you, I will read & re-read I am sure. All the best to you all.
This. Was written for me today I believe. I actually came on here this morning looking for the post you wrote soon after Dash was born that held a similar message. I just had my 4th and last baby 9 days ago and have already struggled with knowing she’s my last. This post spoke volumes to me and I can’t tell you how much I appreciate your writing. Truly. xo
Seriously, I am speechless. THIS. IS. MY. FAVORITE. POST. EVER. So much beauty, so much inspiration. You truly have a gift! I will read this over and over again. Thank you.
THE pictures…BREATHTAKING!!
I love all your posts, but these are my very favorite. The soothing beach, your calming words and something everyone can relate to. I’ve never related that tug of sadness I feel when I’m desperately holding on to something sweet and wonderful my boys do or say to scarcity. But, that’s exactly it. I will document to remember, but the future will be sacred and available, too.
Thank you so much for sharing this. My daughter just turned 5 months old, and my heart resonates with all the feelings you describe. I’ll be back to reread this post for sure. You are such a wonderful mom, Kelle! Your kids are blessed to have you.
I’ve been experiencing a bit of melancholy about G’s childhood. Your post touched me and helped to put a few things in perspective. Thanks for your words and for being such a good mom to those kids. xoxo
This is my favorite post so far. It’s so true. Even without kid, even in the ‘engaged’ state life I’m in, I feel guilty for not soaking up every moment. You’re right. Time marches on, enjoy what you can, then look forward to what’s next.
This is a great one. Thanks for reminding us that there is GREAT STUFF TO LOOK FORWARD TO!!!
Okay. I won’t say this is my favorite because that’s a very limiting statement. I can’t have just one, but I really absolutely do LOVE this post. Kelle, I’ve been an avid reader for about 3 years now. I’ve read and reread your blog over and over because your words just speak so direct to my heart. You say the words that I can’t put down on paper, and you soaked up life like it took me 8 years to do with my own. But now I don’t. Now I suck the marrow. Now I pay attention, and because of that, I’m getting so much better at not hoarding the moments, but instead enjoying every bit of them. Thanks Kelle. I love this.
I love this post. All of it. Our 3rd (and last) child was born a few months before Dash. He turns 2 in exactly 10 days. I know we are done having children, but sometimes it is hard to say goodbye forever to the days of sleepy baby smiles and cute little 6 month onesies. But I know they’re done, and there will be fun days ahead. Days of family vacations without a diaper bag. Days of fun without worrying about the crabby child that missed his nap. I am a documenter like you. My baby books are filled out to the max. It was like a full-time job that first year. But it’s time to pack them up and move on.
Thank you for this beautiful, inspiring post. And I agree with a fellow commenter, your writing has gone to a new level lately. Whatever the reason, I love reading your words.
Wonderful post. Thank you. I adore the first picture of Lainey and the pink glow of the setting sun.
I studied Pema Chodrom when I certified as a yoga instructor. That is a beautiful passage and a simple message to live by.
I love that you quoted Pema Chodron. I named my daughter after her. Please continue to share her words of wisdom.
Oh so many mamma tears reading this today. š Today is the last day my baby of all six of my babies will be one year old (even though according to her she has been “two” for six months already) Two for real, two-tomorrow. Blossoming moment by moment she is!! So I will close my eyes when I hug her. And just like with my others, some day I will close my eyes in 10 or 20 years, and remember these “two” hugs
I’m just… crying right now. So beautiful. So true.
This is so beautiful and touching :-). Your photos are inspiring – thank you for sharing your thoughts. It amazes me how time goes by so quickly and reminds me of how each moment is so precious no matter what. I just finished a beautiful book about this by Susan Newman, Ph.D entitled, “Little Things Long Remembered: Making Your Children Feel Special Every Day.” The author offers memory-building ideas to do that fit parents/grandparents’ hectic lifestyles that is so needed in today’s techno driven world. You can find the author’s website here: http://www.susannewmanphd.com/
as my baby (gasp! almost 18… years not months!) prepares to go to college in January, i realize i missed documenting SO MUCH! i wasn’t an “intentional” parent… I just put one foot in front of the other each day….
Now that my boys, (almost 18, almost 26) are grown (well, mostly) i’m determined to not mourn the loss of their babyhoods and childhoods… i will march forward with excitement to see the men they are now.
Thanks for sharing Kelle. My mom always told me growing up that she loved every age we were at and I thought she was just saying the nice mom thing. My girls are 11 and 14 (both adopted from China) and some days I see babies and miss certain aspects of it but I have to say, watching them grow up and cheering them on is the most amazing thing about motherhood. I love it so much and I have loved every age. I look at my 14 year old and love the teenager that she has become – confident, smart, beautiful and amazing. I know I am her mom, but she really is. My 11 year old is becoming more self assured and independent after being adopted by me when she was 4 years old. She has struggled with this and I am in awe of her. So, with that being said, it only gets better and if you can look at it as something to be gained and not lost, it is beautiful all the way through. I can’t wait to see what lies ahead for both of them and me!
Oh my gosh, this post was so beautifully written and exactly what I needed to hear. I have always always wanted to be a mother. High school was fun, college was awesome, being engaged and wedding planning was great, buying a house, etc etc – but there was always something amazing lying ahead. Now that I have a little one, she is a million times better than my greatest dreams, and the best gift I have ever been given. We want more and hope we are blessed enough to have them. But I spend too much time fearing that I’m at the point in my life where I’m the happiest- and that one day my kids will be grown and while they love me (as I love my mother) it wont be the same. They wont need me – they’ll go on to love their own kids more than they love me. I want to read – and re-read – your words until I believe them. I need to believe them. Thanks for letting us know we are not alone in our thoughts. And that one day we can become content with the idea that time is not fleeting, but forever.