Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

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a birthday post

January 22, 2012 By Kelle

It is easy to say “two years ago.” Two years isn’t a very long time, and the memories of her welcome, for the most part, are still clear. I remember what it feels like to cry so desperately that relief breaths can only come in short, stomach-jerking gasps. And, days later, how I listened to this song and this song, clutching to every word, praying it would be true–that we would be okay.

In the first two years, we talk about then and now, the difference between these two abstract eras distinct and concrete. But as the bridge between these two places slowly grows, the distinction likewise fades. A moment that changed me forever, yes; but the outcome a product of what was there all along. I had the love. I had the strength and courage. I was so capable of being her mama. I just didn’t know it.

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I think about that a lot–how I am the same person today as I was the day before she was born even though it doesn’t seem true. How I am the same person I am today as I will be thirty years from now. What stones will be unturned in life–whether victories or challenges–to reveal more love, more courage, more understanding? We evolve.

As Cher would say, if I could turn back time…

I would take that little body and hold it closer, breathe her in, study her long fingers and smooth pink cheeks and let my soul do what it begged to do–to connect with its counterpart and fully accept her as the gift we needed. I would wrap my body around her, smell her, kiss her, draw her right into the place she needed to be and let her feel a purer love. I would trace her features with wonder rather than apprehension and know that her tired little frown would evolve…just like we would.

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And while this day represents so much more, really it’s about a little girl who was born. A daughter who came to be, a sister who arrived, a baby like any other who just needed to be loved.

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Oh, how she is loved.

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This morning she woke up early–early enough I had to check the clock to make sure it wasn’t still the middle of the night. I heard the rattle of the crib railing and her happy whispers, and I finally reluctantly climbed out to welcome the day with her. I feel her low muscle tone most when I pull her from the crib. There is no resistance, no independent efforts to stand tall and pull her weight, and I love that. Every ounce of her sinks into my grasp as I lift her and pull her close, her bottom settling into my forearm, her hands touching my face, her chest fully dropping into my shoulder. I remember pregnancy yoga classes and how long it took the instructor to guide us into this kind of limber physical release. “Let go of your shoulders. Imagine your chest is dropping. Now release your leg muscles, your thighs, your calves…let go of it all. Submit to the peace in your inner soul,” she’d exhort and even after all those steps, there was still a part I couldn’t let go. After that experience I realize low muscle tone is hardly a disability. It’s an enviable ability…to just be.

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We walked out into the dark living room, her head still resting on my shoulder. “Is it your birthday?” I whispered. She pulled her head up and smiled. “Yeah,” she answered. I thought about exactly where I was two years ago. Counting contractions. Waiting for the doctor to call. Knowing I’d finally get to meet my daughter.

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It feels good to skip over the rest–to look back at the dark and difficult moments and stop right when it hurts to run and hold her. Like getting through the awful suspenseful parts in a movie you’ve already seen–not so bad when you know it ends well.

It’s two years later–not long, but long enough to know…it ends well.

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No matter what happens, it ends well because life is bigger than scripts and sets and how-it’s-supposed-to-bes.

And before I quote another singer–God forbid, Richard Marx–let me cut to the chase.

Dude, these two years have been grand. And we love her. We love our children with a deeper, purer love that is so infinite, it cannot be shaken.

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Happy Birthday, Nella.

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You are everything we ever wanted. I only wish we would have been cool enough to know it then.

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We know now. We love you so much, Birthday Girl. And we celebrate you today.

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And thank you, little girl, for my birth day–what gift that day, those moments, those tears will always be.

“Awareness born of love is the only force that can bring healing and renewal. Out of our love for another person, we become more willing to let our old identities wither and fall away, and enter a dark night of the soul, so that we may stand naked once more in the presence of the great mystery that lies at the core of our being. This is how love ripens us -by warming us from within, inspiring us to break out of our shell, and lighting our way through the dark passage to new birth.” -John Welwood

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Filed Under: Designer Genes, Favorites 427 Comments

Little Changes, Good Changes

January 21, 2012 By Kelle

Turns out the run the other night was just the beginning, the preview of exorcisms to come.

Last night, it was the toy basket liner–the one that always slips down all cock-eyed every time I throw a toy in, trapping doll shoes and Mr. Potato Head arms so no one can find them. I’d finally had it. I tossed a harmonica and down it went, behind the liner, and I couldn’t untie the little knots that secured it to the basket for the life of me. So I did what any self-respecting mother would do. I lost it. I took the basket and dumped it upside down in a crazed upheaval that sent toys crashing to the wood floor–some I hadn’t seen in years–and I ripped that #@$*!@& basket liner out and threw it away like it was the first step toward a more peaceful future. And it was.

Aw, hell done just broke loose. I weeded out toys. I dusted my coffee table. I assured a group of baby dolls that Goodwill was a great place to live, and when I filled two garbage bags full of things to give away and finally put the kids to bed, I sat on my kitchen counter and convinced Brett to listen to one of my doozies–the once-every-three-month really deep life conversation. And though this all may seem unnecessarily dramatic, I’ve realized this reaction is part of who I am. No matter how many personality quizzes I’ve taken–even if I try and alter the outcome by Christmas-treeing my way through questions, it is inevitable my diagnosis says “Hey, you’re impulsive! Hey, you’re emotional!” If emotions were an English breakfast tea, let’s just say I let my tea steep so long and so strong until just a sip of it demands action: spit it out, throw it out, make new tea, talk about the tea, write a tea thesis. Get a degree in tea studies, start a tea company and change the tea world. I’ve long tried to balance things better–slower, more thoughtful, more analyzed but, at the same time, concentrated emotion propels me into action in some sort of revolutionary way. I’ve been asked so many times if it would have been easier to have a prenatal diagnosis for Down syndrome, and I can honestly say I know myself well enough to believe the shock and heightened emotion of that moment was important for me. Deprogramming, in a way. A distinct slate-cleansing beginning.

I’m all about clean slate beginnings. The important issue, regardless of whether we attend to every quiet emotion the second it arises or wait until things are a great big ball of “you better fix this shit,” is that we attend to emotions at all. Listen to them, learn from them.

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There is no life-altering crisis here. In fact, a mind x-ray would reveal things that might be trite and silly to some, hardly reason for a deep life conversation or going apeshit on a toy basket. There are however a lot of little things I can change right now–bad habits, inattentive routines, shift of focus.
For all the times I spent crying on my bed when I was younger because, God forbid, my world was changing a little bit, I’ve realized somewhere around thirty, I developed a healty addiction to the very thing I’ve hated my whole life…change. Change is growth, and without it we are stagnant. Stale. Boring.

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Shake it up, Baby.

We talked about change last night. About wanting to be better and making deliberate efforts to deposit time and affection in the family bank. When things get busy, it is so easy to turn on Little Bear for Lainey, serve quick and easy dinners, throw towels next to the bathtub, scratch washing my face before bed. But it doesn’t feel good after a while. And I want to feel good.

So I wrote a tea thesis. Took change to the tenth power and deprogrammed–or rather reprogrammed–little things around the house that seemed symbolic. Rearranged the living room, swapped out picture frames, packed up the 12 month clothes and put them away. No Little Bear today. New accessible book stacks and puzzle piles.

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Today was quiet and thougtful and felt a little bit new. I dug up a pair of shoes I haven’t worn in ages. Twisted my hair into braids for something different. Chose an alternate path to the lake.

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Seriously, she falls asleep at the lake every time.

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I used to think emotional “funks” would just ride out on their own–grab a board, ride the wave. I find more comfort now though in the truth they hold. Funks aren’t the cause of emotions; they are the effect–messages to which we need to listen and respond.

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Whether our response is monumental or something as simple as rearranging a living room or cleaning out a toy bin, it’s the action of responding that is empowering–funk-erasing.

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I’m finding such clarity in just the initiation of changed behaviors. I moved a poetry book to my nightstand this morning, added a couple new items to my bucket list today, had an ice cream date with new friends.

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And I feel invigorated. Ready to take on the tea world.

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*****

While new is great, old standbys are comfy and reassuring too.

Like best friends.

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Same old park.

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Post holiday return to baking.

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Friday Photo Dumps.

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*****

In keeping with being kinder to myself, I’m excited about taking time for a skincare regimen before bed instead of a splash ‘n go, especially since I have a new skincare set from our latest sponsor Muvazi. Muvazi skin products are paraben free and made with natural ingredients. Their anti-aging skin care system is made up of a cleanser/toner, an oxygentic eye cream, an intra-cellular moisturizer and a hydrating face serum, and I feel like a badass now when I’m actually taking the time before bed to wash and moisturize my skin.

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And the best part? Buy a skincare system using code ‘nella’ at check-out, and your $119 skin care system is only $79.95/free shipping, plus $5 will be donated to Nella’s” 2 for 2 fund for every kit sold.

*****

That reminds me. Sister’s got a birthday this weekend.

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Since Tuesday’s post, another $25,000 has been raised for Nella’s 2 for 2. We are beyond grateful. Every state has been represented, and over 200 international donations have been made from 15 countries. And Molly Dunn, a reader’s 10-year old daughter we have never met, will once again give up her birthday presents this year in lieu of donations to Nella’s birthday fund (thank you, sweet Molly). I think that the Internet can be a grand place, and you people prove that the world is full of kindness and incredible intentions. With $20,000 to go, the fund is still kickin’.

We are looking forward to celebrating our girl’s memorable entrance into our lives this weekend. There will be cake. And I will cry.

If you feel so inclined, leave a comment sharing any small changes in your life that you’d love to initiate to shake things up. Make new tea.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 178 Comments

Helping Yourself

January 19, 2012 By Kelle

I sat down a couple hours ago to write this post. Had a halfway decent string of thought going, some good pictures, a window of opportunity while Brett entertained the kids before bed. But as I tapped out the first few sentences, I realized I felt jittery and unfocused–a present feeling that couldn’t be ignored once I sat down and attempted to clear my thoughts enough to write. I love that about writing–the space it requires gives such clarity to my feelings or at least draws attention to its absence.

My to-do list is ripe right now, and my time and thoughts are being fractioned into too many areas–most of them fulfilling but still stretching me a bit uncomfortably. I’ve felt a little edgy and off until finally tonight, in a moment of Priority Triage, I realized I haven’t been kind to myself.

I turned my computer off, fetched my running shoes, hollered to Brett something about needing to “reclaim my mind” and ran out the door. I didn’t even bother to stretch but rather threw myself into a steady pace, desperate to connect with that part of myself I’ve ignored for a little while–the quiet inner voice that sacrifices its needs first when other responsibilities call but withers soon enough if it’s not fed, slowly taking with it inspiration, confidence, motivation, contentment. And while sacrificing taking care of our own selves most often feels good because we’re giving to someone else–our kids, our family, our community, our friends–it only lasts so long. The source from which you give must grow as well. And tonight I realized, I need to fill it up. I need more sleep, more calm, more exercise, more pleasure reading, more thoughtful food choices, more time alone with my husband, more quotes, more music, more quiet moments with my girls.

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I ran like nobody’s business tonight. Felt the quiet voice that’s been submerged for a bit reawaken with my very first stride. “I’m alive! I’m alive!” she cried. Florence and the Machine belted out “The Dog Days,” and I sprinted through the black spaces between each streetlight and slowed down at every yellow glow to two-step a kicky move to the “like a bullet in the baaaaaaaaack” line. And I wonder why I don’t make time for this every night. Suddenly, clarity.

I didn’t run a marathon tonight. Didn’t need to. I did run an effortless three blocks and then turned around to make an introspective walk home. I noticed the wind, the stars, the way the blood rushed to my fingertips and made them itch. I noticed myself, something I’ve forgotten to do lately.

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We cannot make good mamas, good wives, good friends if we don’t.

Two little girls in mismatched jammies welcomed me back home, and I took over bedtime routines, kicking off my shoes and climbing into our big bed for story time.

“I can do it if you need to write,” Brett offered.

“Dude, I just had an exorcism, I’m good.” I replied, pointing to my shoes.

There will be more of this. It is so re-energizing, inspiring, needful. Those flight attendants know what they’re talking about: put your own oxygen mask on first before assisting someone else.

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*****

Today, in photos and very few words:

The Lake.

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The Sky.

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The Driveway Neighborhood Friend Gathering.

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The Newborn Fix #2 this Week with my friend Erin’s baby, Ethan

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The Post Bun Waves

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My friend, Kim, makes these killer snap barrettes

*****

Back in tomorrow for a short little something special.
Thank you so much for sharing our 2 for 2 post. Watching the ticker move is an inspiring pastime around here these days.

Good night.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 117 Comments

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