Enjoying the Small Things

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An Outline: Three Things

September 1, 2012 By Kelle

Before I write anything, I have to thank you for the kind words and all the love you’ve been sharing this past week. From kindergarten stories to hang-in-theres, this little space (and my Instagram and FB buds!) has felt like such a community–a reminder that no matter where we are or what our lives look like, we really are so very much the same. We need support, we give support. Both of these factors–needing and giving–are equally important to emotional survival.

I’ve had three major topics swimming around in my head this past week, and I’ve wanted to write about all three. They probably each deserve a separate post, but then I’d get very behind and while I was waiting to write about those, three other topics would climb aboard the write-about list, and words would begin backing up. I’d need some sort of mental Activia to regulate my brain. My friend Rebecca calls this state of mind mental mastitis. Which is just great–we have irregular bowels and swollen breasts to which we compare our need to write. What does that say about us?

I’m eatin’ my yogurt, I’m ice-packin’ my brain. Here goes.

First and foremost, Brett is great. In fact, the doctors swear he’s some sort of nutritional athlete based on his tests–a fact he finds funny. Cholesterol, EKG’s, stress tests–they all shout “Be Grateful.” And we are. Other than the crop circles shaved out in his chest hair and the hilarious stories my hospital/medicine/doctor/needle-phobic man has to share of his experience, you’d never know we were scared shirtless earlier this week. Yes, shirtless because my dad will let that one slide.

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My favorite story–the one that had me curled up on the couch clutching my side with laughter–was Brett’s rehash of his stress test. The way they sanded–sanded his chest with sandpaper. And the man who walked in holding a Back-to-the-Future metal vial that had “NUCLEAR” printed in neon letters on its side and said “I’m here to inject you.” My husband thinks epidurals are poison–you can imagine his feelings on this space-age ritual that involved needles, the word “nuclear” and…his body. Apparently after pokes and strange sensations, he tasted metal in his mouth and said something to the nurse who said, “Oh honey, that’s just the mercury you’re tasting.” It is a wonder he didn’t really, truly have heart problems after that experience alone. And for all those sweet medical professionalists who have written in concern–promise, we are following up with a regular physician.

Three topics, one post. Let’s break it down outline style.

I. Kindergarten, Week 2

This whole thing has been like Bloom: Finding Beauty in Five-Year-Old Anxiety, Lainey’s follow up version to her mother’s memoir. The same principles abide:

A. Life is Hard.
B. You have to go through it.
C. You learn.
D. And then you grow.

Day two, three and four didn’t magically get better. She still cried and I still cried and we talked, talked, talked through all of it. But I’ve had my favorite conversations to date with my daughter, communicating through all of this anxiety, comforting her on the drive to school, lying in bed at night discussing what this is all about. After quickly growing accustomed to the comfort and security within her own little classroom, she still expressed so much fear in the morning regarding her day–enough to cry through morning routines and skip breakfast the entire first week. “I’m so scared,” she would say. And when we would prompt for more specific explanation, she made two important clarifications: “I’m scared of music and art class” and “I’m scared of learning.” Music and art were two related arts classes she hadn’t yet attended–new teachers, new experiences, and the fear of the unknown overwhelmed her. And the fear of learning itself? Well, aren’t we all afraid of that. As exciting as the world of knowledge and experience is, the magnitude of information–what we don’t know and have yet to learn–can make us feel so small and fragile.

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It seemed appropriate one morning on the drive to school to share a little bit more with Lainey, especially when five seconds of car silence stimulated her already growing anxiety and she asked me, “Please keep talking about school, Mommy. I’m scared.” I asked her if she wanted me to tell her a story about the scariest time in my life, when I too was “scared of learning” and cried every day.

I told her about Nella’s birth. How when they told me she had Down syndrome, I cried because I was scared. I didn’t know anything about Down syndrome, and I was scared of learning.

“Do you think Nella’s scary?” I asked Lainey. Her anxiety broke for a moment while she laughed and answered “No.”

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“Of course not,” I replied. “It’s just that I didn’t know anything about Down syndrome, and I had to learn. I cried every day for a while, but every day it got better, and pretty soon I stopped crying because I forgot about Down syndrome. I learned that it wasn’t scary anymore. I know school seems scary now, but I promise it will get better.”

When I picked up Lainey from school on Thursday–the same morning she cried, afraid of music class–I watched as she held the hand of the safety patrol who walked her to my car. She tried to conceal her smile, but her attempts were futile. She climbed in, threw her backpack on the floor and proudly announced, “I like music. It’s not scary.” And yesterday? She hugged me tight before class and marched right in, no tears. No tears, all day. My my, how she has grown.

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We catch her playing school now with her stuffed animals and little pool critters–arranging them in story circles, asking the little cow to hold the door, reminding the octopus he needs to raise his hand.

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Oh, Nella’s about to get in big, big trouble for goin’ in for a swipe. The five seconds that followed this picture when Lainey found out she wrecked her class line? Yeah, I didn’t photograph that.

It’s a tiny window into the happenings of her classroom. “Please walk quietly,” she’ll say after she takes ten minutes to line them up perfectly. She calls them by her classmates’ names. She talks about star charts and morning snack and borrowing crayons from Jillian. And can I just say, I’m thrilled she gets to experience this right now.

Sister bloomed.

II. Fred’s

I’ve written about Fred’s on Tuesday nights before. I call it Tuesday Night Church because God is there. In fact, I think it might be his headquarters. Now that Fred’s is closing for a month for renovations, I realize how important this evening is for me; how important these friends are in my life.

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I started going for me. I think acceptance of anything challenging in life is a forever journey. For me, adulthood special needs is where I focus on preparing my heart, and when I heard about Fred’s special needs dance night, I knew it would be good for me. I needed to be there–to learn and embrace. In thinking about the future and embracing my daughter’s special needs, I have submerged myself in a mix of acceptance, research and advocacy. For Down syndrome, the focus of all three of these areas seems to be the very positive message of progress. We want the world to know we’ve made great strides in this community. That Down syndrome looks like inclusion and college and independent living. Down syndrome looks different in 2012 than it did in 1950. I am so thankful for this fact. It is inspiring and motivating and says a lot about dreams. If you build it, they will come. If you believe it, it can happen.

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I believe the progress in our community is directly related to this mindset–wanting more for our children, finding new ways to educate, studying the science and psychology behind how our children learn, raising standards.

There is a part of me that worries though. I worry that this message of “Look what Down syndrome looks like now” can be misinterpreted to “Accept my child BECAUSE Down syndrome looks like this.” Because she could very well go to college or drive a car or speak well or live independently. And the level of advancement any child makes in life should, in no way, be related to the level of respect, love and dignity she deserves.

I want my child to be accepted because she is a human being who deserves to be loved and respected.

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It is only natural for me to be inspired by the bright future of individuals with Down syndrome. To hear stories of twenty-year-olds in college or thirty-year-olds who are married and living on their own and to grasp on to that hope for Nella—to share those stories with the world to demolish existing stereotypes.

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Assumptions dwell among this community. If parents are fighting for answers and spending hours researching how to break down more barriers, they’re accused of not accepting their child’s diagnosis. If others seem to be content with their child’s speech and motor delays, they’re accused of settling for low standards.

We need both—high expectations and progress as well as acceptance of our children, loved just the way they are.

So I started to go to Fred’s to stretch that part of me that wants to accept all of this. To see people for who they are, regardless of what they have accomplished. Sure, Nella is part of it, but it goes beyond that for me. It goes beyond Down syndrome too because there are individuals with many different special needs at Fred’s—some who speak well and text fifty words a minute on their cell phones and some who don’t speak at all, who communicate with their heart and their eyes and yes, sometimes their hips (Dude, the dancing. I can’t even explain the dancing. You’ve seen Dirty Dancing? Yeah. There’s some of that goin’ on).

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I look at every one of these individuals and imagine that they could be Nella. Or Lainey. Or me. And I want to know what that feels like. When I first started coming, my goal was to make each of them feel special. I asked them what their names were, what they liked to do, I made sure no one was dancing alone, I high fived and bumped hips and exerted every ounce of energy I had to spread compassion like it was my job. Sometimes, I’d go home so emotionally exhausted. It was work. Good, satisfying work, but work.

What’s happened the past few weeks though is that it doesn’t feel much like work anymore. These people truly have become my friends. Instead of coming thinking “I’m here to be compassionate” or “I’m here to grasp some big meaning of life,” I just show up and let the spirit of Fred’s-on-Tuesdays do what it does best. Let go and drink it in. My laugh lines have grown deeper. My hips have become more fluid. Hell, I lost my voice last week after hollering “Whooooohoooo!” through every measure of Party Rock. I’m enjoying myself and thinking less about embracing special needs because they’re kind of a moot point once the music starts.

We talk a lot. I’m really getting to know them—where they work, where they grew up, who likes the doo-wop bands, who likes the “sexy sexy” songs, and who’s in love with whom (I’m deeply engrossed in one of the on-again, off-again romances, and I’m ashamed to say I’ve been carrying messages back and forth between them, secretly rooting for this couple to get back together).

I don’t even really know why I go, but I know I need to be there. It’s knowing God.

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*****

Alright, last outline point.

III. A New Friend

It’s interesting how this happened. A couple months ago, a few of you left comments that you found Enjoying the Small Things by way of another blogger, Glennon Melton who writes at Momastery.com. So I check this chick out and realize I’ve read some of her pieces on the Huffington Post, and I really dig what she has to say. I drop her an e-mail to thank her for her beautiful mention of Nella’s birth story, and we start writing back and forth. Meanwhile, I’m reading deep into her blog, and I am riveted. Moved, intrigued, completely awestruck by the way this woman is using every ounce of herself–her past, her vulnerabilities, her strengths, her story to GRAB people and help them. And help herself. Isn’t that what writing is really about though? We write to help ourselves.

And then she tells me what a funny thing it is because her family is moving to Naples in a matter of weeks. And during this time of planning out how we’ll get together to meet, I get more and more e-mails from readers. Do you know Glennon Melton? Have you ever heard of Glennon? You two have to meet.

So we did. Four hours in a coffee shop talking about everything. Writing, kids, God, books, husbands, travel, dreams, people, love, blogging, messy houses, school, parents, ourselves. Sbe is everything her writing portrays her to be–honest, real, good, vulnerable and funny as hell. If you don’t already read her, you should.

Photobucket And I have to hurry and post this because our families are meeting each other today. Our kids, our husbands. This feels so very meant to be.

*****

Oh, that felt good. Three subjects, one post. No more blockage.

*****

Friday Photo Dump:

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Look…Baby’s growin’.

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There’s an official shelf for Nella to sit on.

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*****

I’m excited to have one of our sweet Etsy shops back in the spotlight this month (pun intended). We have several strands of Bubblewish lights in our home–in both of my girls’ rooms, draped across our entry way and headboards during the holidays, and a light-free star strand scalloped across our shower curtain. Bubblewish twinkly lights are a whimsical addition to any room and add a dream-like glow with a touch of personality.

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Bubblewish will be adding some new fall and holiday strands to the shop soon. Check it out!

*****

Saw my first shooting star last night. That was pretty cool.

Happy Weekend. Sorry for the crazy long post.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 109 Comments

Everything is Significant

August 30, 2012 By Kelle

There are a few disclaimers before this post.

A: I’m on my laptop and the “d” key is really sticky. Driving me crazy. If some of my d’s are left off, you might have to throw one in. This paragraph alone took me about five minutes to write because I had to go back and press hard for all the “d’s.”

B: There are no pictures in this post. I’m too tire to pull them off my camera, and I haven’t taken very many the past couple of days. So if the pictures make you happy, more happy will come next post.

C: I almost din’t write tonight because I knew I’d wake up tomorrow and feel fine, and it would be a much better day to write a post. It woul make sense and it would have pictures and I wouldn’t be tired and it woul have unicorns. But I owe it to myself to write on nights like tonight. It already feels goo. Or good. Oh, and the unicorns? They’re there. They’re just sleepy tonight. In the barn, having a rest. But they’re there. Always.

*****

I think I shoul begin by saying I sent Lainey to school today with a hot dog in her lunch and my kids had McDonald’s for dinner at 7:30. Half of me has a problem with this because I don’t think hot dogs and McDonald’s are the healthiest things for kids (although that doesn’t stop us), and half of me has a problem with this because I care what people think and a torn-up hot dog in a Tupperware on the fourth day of school doesn’t exactly send the cool mom vibe I had envisioned (at least I cut an apple to go with it). Heidi picked Lainey up from school today and teased me later, “Dude. What was in her lunch box? If you’re going to send a hot dog, at least cut it with a sharp knife. It was, like, ripped.” This is true.

Because it was a day. Actually, it’s been a bit of a week, and I know what I’m about to say is so enjoying-the-small-things-painted-on-a-plaque, but it feels good. It feels good to be frazzled and falling apart a little bit because I feel like I’m learning a lot. I feel love from friends and family. I feel good to laugh and make fun of torn-up hot dogs. I feel good to surrender to the freedom of hot mess, and I almost want to take it to the moon. Like maybe drop off Lainey for school in the morning wearing my pajamas and dragging toilet paper from my shoe because at least it would be funny. I mean, if you’re having a frazzled week, you might as well go big or go home.

Oh look, the “d” is working now.

I asked Brett if I shouldn’t mention this on the blog because it’s his stuff and not mine and because–well, some things are private and not to be shared. But we have lots of private things (the word private makes me giggle) that we don’t share, and he says he doesn’t care about this one and that if writing about it feels good, then I should write about it.

Everything’s fine now. Just fine. But he had some scary chest pains today and we went to the ER and they kept him overnight to do that whole we-take-chest-pain-very-seriously thing (as they should). They already did a slew of tests, and everything looks great. I’m not worried anymore. In fact, by the time I left the hospital tonight, I was taking awkward hospital pictures and sending them to friends. And if the old man one curtain over in the ER yelled “I need to call Liberty Mutual” any louder, Liberty Mutual would have heard him and showed up.

But earlier today, I was not okay. I was scared and crying and made embarrassing emotional calls to people who don’t speak embarrassing emotional (it’s a very sloppy language that I need to perfect). I guess nothing makes me freak more than my family in jeopardy. My family. My love.

Because I know mature and pulled-together people stay calm and level-headed during moments like this, I realized today that I must not be mature or pulled-together. I’m going to work on that. What I do know is that you rise to the occassion, always. There’s an adrenaline rush that comes with those moments when life feels a little bit like it’s in danger of falling apart, and it makes you feel very responsible. To your family. To yourself. Fight or flight, baby, and I’m flying.

Between kindergarten emotions and it-could-have-been-a-heart-attack, I am learning more about myself and my family. What we are capable of. How we need each other. What we can do better. We seem to learn it when life gets sticky.

We may have had happy meals for dinner, but I felt so on top of my game later tonight. I put two girls to bed with clean jammies, made Lainey’s lunch, signed papers in her Wednesday folder, talked to the boys about today, had a great chat with their mom, made some calls, took my prenatal vitamins and ultimately decided to write a post.

Brett will most likely be home tomorrow, and his follow-up will go back in the private folder where it belongs. We’ll move forward and feel grateful and will be making crafts and packing better lunches soon. I will keep thinking about this for a while because I think that’s what these moments are for. I’ll tone it down beneath “embarrassing emotional” but dial it above “insignificant” because everything is significant. …it’s how we grow.

And I can’t wait to write more about Fred’s on Tuesday nights, kindergarten progression and a new friend I finally met that rocked my world.

But it’s late, and I am tired and it’s been a very, very long day.

Filed Under: Uncategorized 197 Comments

That First Day

August 27, 2012 By Kelle

This post was intended to be written on Friday, but Friday swallowed me whole. I was so physically, mentally and emotionally exhausted, it wouldn’t have come out right–of this I am sure. And in between the first day of kindergarten and new home routines, a little storm called Isaac came rolling in this weekend, intimidating South Florida enough to close schools today. Lainey’s thrilled, thank you very much.

So, kindergarten…

After I dropped Lainey off at school Thursday and had my parking lot cry (followed by coffee shop cry, call-to-Brett cry, and call-to-sister/mom/dad/cousin cry, respectively), I set out to find her the perfect pair of gym shoes. It wasn’t really about the shoes but more about me needing to occupy my time–a mission I gave myself that subconsciously represented wanting to fix her sadness, wanting to make her happy some way, somehow. So I hit every shoe store in Naples, looking for the perfect shoes. Salesmen showed me their latest and greatest, but nothing said Lainey.

“No, no shoelaces,” I’d argue. “She can’t tie yet.”

Somewhere between the fourth and fifth store, I realized I was being silly and yet that’s part of motherhood too. We cope with things in silly ways sometimes, and Thursday I shopped for shoes like my child’s acceptance of kindergarten depended on a velcro, thick-soled, quality-stitched, not-pink, adorable pair of tennis shoes.

I bumped into Heidi halfway through my shopping, and she had news from the underground–a text from another mom who had seen Lainey at recess.

“Dina just texted me. She saw Lainey at recess!”

“She did?” I asked, hopeful. “And?”

Heidi’s eyes widened and she flashed a fake smile. “And that’s all. She talked to her.”

Rule of Life #421: When your best friend’s lying to you, her eyes get big.

“Oh my God, you’re so lying. You’re trying to spare me. What else did she say?” I asked.

“Shit. I knew you were going to ask me that.” Heidi paused for a minute, carefully planning her next words. “She was crying, Kelle. She was sitting by herself, crying.”

And that? That’s like taking a bullet.

Heidi started crying before I did. “I’m sorry. This sucks, doesn’t it? Let me go up there. Will they let me go be with her?”

“We can’t,” I answered. “You don’t know how badly I want to. But, she’s just got to go through this, and it sucks.”

Dad, I know I’ve said shit and sucks in one post, but it’s all I had last week.

It sucked.
But then it got a little bit better.

*****

The drop-off was the hardest part of motherhood yet (give or take a couple of traumatic birth experiences, hospital stays, a life-rocking unexpected diagnosis–we can call that a given, right?). I sensed her anxiousness, I felt her grip, I listened to her soft sobs as she begged me not to leave. I hugged and reassured and prayed she wouldn’t see my tears. I brought my camera thinking if there’s one time to take pictures, it’s the first day of school. But the only time I pulled it away from me was to snap a photo looking down-the only photo we have from the morning she started school.

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Two wonderful teachers who know just what to say and exactly how to comfort–they peeled her away from me while she cried, after my last quick hug, and I walked out the door where my friend was waiting. We hugged for a good minute and then sat in her car in the parking lot for another half hour before I sent her back up to check on Lainey. She returned, smiling. A good report: no crying, sitting on the carpet with the other students and a smile from the teacher who looked up from her book just for a moment to whisper “Excellent”–a word she indeed knew would be carried by the messenger back to the mama.

I thought about Lainey all day. I knew it wouldn’t be easy–lunch and recess and joining another class for art. I know my girl; I knew there’d be tears. And I’d be lying if I said I didn’t imagine some Black Hawk Down rescue–running in that school to sit by her throughout the day–knowing how big she’d smile, how good she’d feel to have me there. I think I surprised a lot of people–even myself.

“I thought you’d rent a helicopter,” my dad admitted. In fact, he sent Heidi to pull me from the classroom that first morning–unbeknownst to me–assuming I wouldn’t be strong enough to peel away from Lainey myself. Moments after The Great Peel-Away of 2012, I watched from the parking lot as Heidi, practically in her pajamas, came tearing around the corner in her white minivan, and I had to laugh when she looked shocked to see me standing there. (Sidenote: That damn white minivan always shows up. Always. In fact, if you want to be “the friend who shows up,” I’d suggest you start by getting a white minivan.)

Heidi quickly explained. “Dude, I came to get you out of there. Your dad texted me that he couldn’t get ahold of you, and he was sure you were in that classroom and never leaving. I’m here on official business. I thought for sure I’d have to pull you out. How did you do it?”

We both started laughing, mine still through tears. “You guys underestimate me. I know this is part of it. I knew I’d have to leave.”

*****

I watched the clock all day. Showed up forty minutes early to make sure I got a good parking spot, checked in as a visitor, waited against the wall outside her classroom and watched for the door to open with that final school bell. And when it opened, the first one out was Lainey, holding the hand of her teacher, swallowed by that backpack half her size, smiling her coy little closed-mouth grin when she saw me.

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Lunch and recess and switching classes for related arts is hard and will take some getting used to. But in one day my girl, who last week reported she was “nervous of learning,” was proud to tell me that she loves her classroom and adores her teacher. While students walked to buses and made their way to their parents’ cars that afternoon, my girl knelt down and unzipped her backback. She couldn’t wait to show me the picture she drew at school. “It’s me and you,” she pointed out, smiling.

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When we returned the second day of school, she still didn’t want to go. She cried at recess again, and I cried to hear that. But it was already different. She didn’t grip my hand so tightly, she didn’t need to be peeled away. I saw confidence that had bloomed in one short day–the same kind of confidence that has appeared, without fail, so many times in my own life when I had to work a bit to find it. It’s there.

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Self reflection is so very much a part of these motherhood moments. I have thought about why this is so hard, what I could have done to make it better. We chose not to do daycare or preschool for Lainey, and I don’t regret that decision at all, even though it may have made this transition a little easier. I wonder what things we can do to help smooth out these first few weeks, and we are trying lots of fun ideas–some our own, and some wonderful suggestions of yours. The thing is, there are a hundred billion ways to raise a child–to nourish them, to teach them to think on their own, to instill confidence, to show them kindness, to challenge them to be respectful, to educate them, to show them the world. And when you choose a way to do these things–a way that fits and feels good for your family and your child–I think it’s only natural to wonder if maybe one of the 99,999,999,999 other ways might have worked better.

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A wonderful friend e-mailed me on Thursday after the morning report, and her reassuring words spoke right to my vulnerabilities:

“This is NOT the report I was hoping for. And yet…it makes sense, sister. You have created such a heaven at home that everything without you is going to feel a bit hellish at first, right? And isn’t that sort of perfect? She’s gotta find her little slices of heaven without you. She’s gotta grow eyes like her mama’s eyes–eyes that find beauty in the little things in her own little school life. You’ve been finding joy for her, and now she has to channel her mama without her mama.”

What a challenge that is for all of us as parents, no matter how old our children are or when and where they go to school or how shy or outgoing they may be–encouraging them to find beauty in their surroundings, even if we are not there to point it out. As we get ready for the rest of the week and the four school drop-offs we face in the next four days, I’m thinking about opportunity. For Lainey, of course, it exists in the classroom, through the insecurities, and moment after moment at school when she continually recognizes ways to be happy and learn and make friends and find reassurance in her own abilities. For me and Brett, that opportunity exists at home–in seeking creative ways to talk about school, to role play scenarios of timidness and confidence, to prepare her every night and every morning to give it another shot.

This is all new territory, and hell, are we ever learning. It feels good though. I knew it was coming from the day she was tiny, when kindergarten seemed nothing but a far-off dream.

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And it will come again, soon enough.

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The plus side? Well, there are many of them, one of them being the whole school experience. Like playing house. There will be musicals and school fairs and late night texts to other moms asking what time the field trip starts, and I’m still in that “this is so cool that I have two kids” phase. Because sometimes I don’t really believe it.

After the drop-off Friday morning, a few of us kindergarten mama friends huddled at the front of the school and rehashed. One held a jammied baby on her hip, I held my styrofoam coffee cup, and school procedures commenced around us while we made good mama conversation. I liked it. I felt like I did when I bought a vacuum for my first condo. I just felt–I don’t know–like a real grown-up. Because lots of times, I don’t.

The moral of the story:

She’ll be fine. She’ll do great.

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Mark Poulin’s cupcake necklace makes things happier.

We all will.

As my sister reminded me last week, “Our job is to prepare our kids for a life beyond us.” What an empowering task.

Oh, and the gym shoes? Found ’em. They are perfect. They are Lainey.

*****

Friday Photo Dump:

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Friday Phone Dump photos are taken on the Instagram iPhone app (free) and dropped into a 12×12 collage using a photo editing software (Photoshop Elements works). I am @etst (enjoying the small things) on Instagram if you care to follow the feed.

And your #enjoyingthesmallthings photos. (If you use Instagram and have a photo that makes you happy, share it by using the hashtag #enjoyingthesmallthings. Yours may be chosen to be shared in a Friday post.)

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*****

Dashing Bee online children’s consignment shop is returning in sponsorship with a newly renovated site and new inventory. You can search items by size, by brand, by gender and clothing article and get what Dashing Bee is known for–quality, brand name gently used children’s goods at a fraction of the price. Dashing Bee updates their inventory daily and is a great place to shop for inexpensive outerwear for the coming season.

A few of my current favorites on Dashing Bee:

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*****

I’m still settling in to new routines. I have clothes to lay out, a lunch to pack and a girl who needs a fully present mama for bedtime tonight. Goodnight.

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Filed Under: Favorites, Mamahood 164 Comments

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