Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

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just happy.

May 11, 2012 By Kelle

I love Friday posts. I love them because I write them at the end of the day, right after I’ve raised my weekend freak flag (it’s yellow, by the way). I love them because I drink hot tea (cough, cough–beer with lime) while I write, and I play music and open the windows so that the neighbors can dance from their driveways if they feel so inclined. You know what comes wafting out of my office windows on Friday nights? Happy.

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Happy: Impromptu sunset ice cream party Wednesday evening

“Do you think I’m too happy?” I recently asked Brett. Which is kind of like asking if there’re too many daisies in an open field of wildflowers or too many shades of red to choose from on a MAC lipstick stand. He just laughed and walked away. I’m taking that as a no.

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Happy: She brought a xylophone on our walk today and played and sang along the way. Didn’t even get shy when we crossed paths with other walkers.

It’s not that I’m not fully aware that happiness isn’t a perpetual state of mind. If it was, we wouldn’t realize how great happy is. It’s just that “Am I too happy?” is another way of saying “I’m about to paint some more stuff yellow. You cool with that?” If he doesn’t say no, then the answer’s yes.

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Happy: yellow sunburst

There is the kind of “crazy busy” that gives you just enough credibility to say “crazy busy” when someone asks you how you’re doing. And then there’s the crazy busy that really does mean seriously certifiably crazy damn busy. This week has been the latter–keeping up, catching up, promoting the book in a slew of back-to-back radio interviews, appointments, work, house, lather, rinse, repeat, goodnight. And just like mamas learn soon enough with a second child that sleepless nights are a phase, soon replaced with babies who sleep; I tend not to stress much anymore about hectic weeks.

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Happy: Slipped away for breakfast with Lainey this morning–just the two of us

I’ve learned there are parts of me that love quiet and calm and relaxed and slow, and there are parts of me that love adrenaline, projects, busy and stimulated. When one part’s up to bat, the other one’s just benched for a bit, getting ready for his turn. I’ve got a great team; we play well with each other.

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Happy: Impromptu pool date with Lainey’s friend Aleena. And our new Hatley umbrellas (love the wooden handle)

And the savior for escaping both quiet and too calm or crazy and too busy? Stop, drop and run. Pack up the car and drive somewhere–anywhere–for an hour excursion. Last night, my friend Rebecca answered the “leaving house now” text and showed up at the park with a box of popsicles that slowly melted as we walked through park trails, veering off on a secret path that led to an imaginary gnome village. If I wasn’t sworn to secrecy by the kids, I’d tell you that hundreds of tiny bearded gnomes showed up–in hats–and ran from tree to tree, dodging the kids’ glances.

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You could see little sprouts of imagination wildly growing as the kids joined in, describing gnome clothes and hiding spots–where they darted, how they ran.

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Want any day to feel like a Friday party? Go for a walk. Find gnomes. Imagine tiny felted hats and polished boots.

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Other happies just kind of squeezed their way in this week.

Things like loyal dogs.

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A little girl who knows exactly how many days are left until her “hula party” (um, seven).

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Funny rear view mirror smiles that pleasantly catch me off guard.

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Blue skies.

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And Friday Photo Dumps.

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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 care to follow the feed.

*****

Come back this weekend to read four moving stories from readers about being transformed by the unexpected. Or read more from the hundreds of personal stories shared on the We Bloom post.

The beach is calling this Mother’s Day weekend.

Thank you to William Morrow for creating this video, and thank you to all of you who are sharing Bloom with others. (Might I suggest a book for a last minute Mother’s Day gift for friends or mamas?) This Mother’s Day, I am more aware, more appreciative and more–well…happy.

(Direct link to video HERE)

Have a happy weekend. Turn up the music.

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Filed Under: Photo Dump 56 Comments

Camped Out

May 9, 2012 By Kelle

If there was a game that involved points for how many times you can say supermoon, let it be known that last weekend, I would have won. And if extra points could be measured in mosquito bites gained–well now it’s just not fair. I have returned from our weekend camping excursion with a connect-the-dots pattern of mosquito bites so vast, it resembles a map of night sky constellations. The night sky that, might I add, showed off its brilliant supermoon Saturday night.

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It’s been almost two years since we’ve gone camping and, despite the fact that we love the wilderness (I’m loosely using that phrase), I will admit, it’s work. Especially when you’re married to someone who prides himself on having everything one could possibly need on a camping trip. “Please tell me you’re staying longer than one night,” my friend asked when we pulled up in our house-on-wheels. Seriously, Brett brings a camping dresser. Yes, dresser. A five-drawer plastic dresser full of things he hopes people will ask to use just so he can say “Got it!” when someone needs, oh I don’t know—aluminum foil, extra batteries, a jack knife, a bottle opener, dish soap, pot scrapers. All of that? In the dresser, thank you.

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Enamel mug? Got it!

And while Bear Grylls is unpacking our “house,” setting up tents, organizing his dresser drawers, the kids and I set out to explore.

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Hugged to the north by the Estero River and a tall bamboo forest, Koreshan State Park is rich in both nature and history.

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Its grounds are shared by a campground and a historic settlement founded by Cyrus Reed Teed who, together with his followers, lived on these grounds in the late 1800s/early 1900s and practiced Koreshanity, a faith centered around the belief that the universe existed within a hollow sphere. Several of the Koreshan buildings still stand and—in between kayaking, fishing and roasting marshmallows—we toured the historic grounds, peeking in windows, admiring the character of old wood floors and antiques that held stories, and agreeing that we were pleased the neighboring campground was far enough away to avoid a creepy nightfall. However, there were quilts, and quilts tend to soften any ghostly vibes.

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While Lainey went canoeing with Brett Sunday afternoon, I walked a couple hours, pushing Nella in her stroller, pausing to apply more sunscreen, readjust her hat and position her head more comfortably after it gradually slid into that famous sleeping baby head slump. Quiet and near vacant, the park provided an appropriate environment for a hardly-a-thought walk of solitude, a necessary routine I need to make time for more often, I realized. I think a lot–analyzing emotions, creating ideas, philosophizing about over-philosophized things. And sometimes I have to tell myself “Stop thinking. Just be.” So I did just that, focusing on no more than the crackle of the stroller wheels on the broken shell path and marveling at how such skinny trunks on Washington Palms can stand so tall and sturdy.

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The sun was strong and steady this weekend, but the breeze was forgiving. It felt so good to do nothing. To sit on picnic benches, drinking cold beer and watching the girls drag shovels through dirt like it was soft sand and knowing a quick splash under the campsite spigot was all that was necessary to clean them up before bed.

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We did camp-ish things because, when you go camping with a man equipped with a five-drawer camping dresser who pulls lighters and roasting sticks out of his pockets like a quick-draw sharp shooter, you don’t miss a camping beat.

S’mores? I take them as a challenge. I will brown those marshmallows into crisp perfection–evenly roasted, gooey in the center and toasted to the color of brown sugar. Chocolate–slightly melted but still firm. And then the trifecta smash. Voila–the perfect s’more, a very camp-ish thing.

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Our friends, Dave and Julie, who upped the camping ante with an open jeep and their own kayaks.

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Alright, I admit, we’re camping wannabes. We didn’t even bring a guitar. And my camping backpack was a knock-off Vera Bradley bag. But I pretended it was an Osprey Pack–with holes burned into it from campfire embers, and a real canteen inside.

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Favorite camping moment? If unicorns went camping, I’m pretty sure you would find them canoeing down Estero River at midnight. Under a supermoon. I tried it, and trust me–put canoeing under a supermoon on your bucket list. Add wine and stir.

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The water, the land around it, the palms, the sky, the silver edge of the boat–everything was illuminated as if thousands of candles lined the brink of the river. We needed no flashlights as our boat made its way through the river’s winding path and we made toasts under the glowing midnight sky.

Completely worth the mosquito bites.

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I like camping. I like the dust clouds and the cricket sounds and the way the sun seeps through thin tent nylon early in the morning, begging you to wake up. I like rusty old Coleman grills and husbands who know how to use them. I like the sound of tents unzipping, the sight of bright flashlight circles against the black night sky, the taste of a well-roasted marshmallow. And finally, I like returning home, after all the work of tearing down tents and cramming things back into the five drawers of the camping dresser, to review details of the trip with Brett like a wrap-up meeting. “We’ll bring the Pack ‘n Play next time,” we decide, perfecting our camp sleeping methods. “And more hot dogs,” Brett adds, certain to make next time even better.

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A much needed weekend, indeed.

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*****

I have to say, I have been so moved by the stories you have been sharing with the We Bloom invitation. I have many more thoughts on this, but for now I am reading and learning, humbled by the shared human experience of grief, determination, resilience and hope. Thank you for sharing, and please continue to do so (and take some time to read through some of the stories–my goodness, is there much to learn). Four stories will be published this weekend on the blog, and those chosen will receive a personalized signed copy of Bloom: Finding Beauty in the Unexpected.

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*****

Finally, I was thrilled to have a short commentary featured on NPR’s All Things Considered this week. You can hear it HERE.

Filed Under: Our Florida Home 89 Comments

We Bloom

May 7, 2012 By Kelle

A young woman my age has a 1 in 700 chance of having a baby with Down syndrome. While that fact may be interpreted as “not very likely,” I have been reminded the last several months that there is a more relatable statistic that unites us all. It is simple: we all have challenges and therefore, we all experience opportunities to make the best of what we can’t control.

Since Bloom has been published, so many of you have written and shared how you related to the emotions in the book. Many of you have shared your stories that are different from ours but similar in the fact that you too experienced the unexpected. And through all of this, I’ve found that the phrase “we are more alike than different” applies to far more than just chromosomes. Together, we face adversity—the loss of jobs, divorce, sickness, learning new things about our children or friends or families. We relate in that we have shared hopes for the future. We love our children. We crave the support of friends. And most important, we are capable of moving forward, learning more about ourselves through challenges and becoming more compassionate in the process.

I’ve asked one reader in particular if I could share her story. Her post was sent to me the day after Bloom was published, and I was moved by both her vulnerability and courage. After battling hair loss, Sandra wholeheartedly embraced a new discovered beauty and shaved her head. As she wrote, “(I’m) ready to be me. Ready to not conform to the world’s standards of who I should be, or what I should be ashamed of. I get to search for and discover a deeper beauty that I wouldn’t have had the chance to find had I never experienced this.”

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(Read the rest of Sandy’s story HERE).

I’d love to hear more of your stories. This week, I’m introducing We Bloom, an opportunity for you to share your own story that reflects the themes in Bloom. Have you found beauty in the unexpected? Has life taken you on a different path than you envisioned? What have you learned from it?

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Reader Wendy N rockin’ out some Bloom in Seattle, WA

In 300 words or less, please share your story in the comment section of this post. Four entries will be selected and published in a special Mother’s Day post this weekend (with appropriate links to your blog if you have one) and will receive a personalized signed copy of Bloom: Finding Beauty in the Unexpected. Please sign your entry as you’d like to be credited.

I look forward to reading your stories.

Please note: By submitting your story in the comments, you are permitting me to credit you and publish your story on Enjoying the Small Things.

More from our camping weekend later this week.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 382 Comments

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