Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

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over easy.

April 17, 2011 By Kelle

Thankfully for me, Lainey’s activity of choice lately has been coloring. I like coloring–so much that often, after a while, she runs off to find something else to do and I am left coloring, happily, while laundry waits and kids make messes. I color like it’s my job–shading, highlighting, scribbling flecks of contrasting color into Barbie’s hair or deliberating much too long over Wild Raspberry or Hot Magenta for the stripes in Strawberry Shortcake’s shirt. I am selective in my crayon choice and have been known to choose colors based on their names alone. You would understand this if you’re familiar with Crayola’s Box ‘o 96, featuring Macaroni n’ Cheese, a warm soft orange, or Wild Blue Yonder, a murky mountainous blue.

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I’ve also been known to throw out a perfectly good picture and start over if I’ve colored outside the lines or, God forbid, misjudged the intensity of Jungle Green (which, for the record, is far too vibrant for an eye color choice). So it has been a good parenting exercise for me to encourage the freedom of expression that’s so beautifully demonstrated by Lainey when she colors–sometimes out of the lines, sometimes all one color, but every time, her own style. And while I’m carefully gliding my yellow crayon (Laser Lemon, to be precise) along a flower petal to add depth and she’s decided Shamrock is a nice choice for Bert ‘n Ernie’s faces, I’ve come to the conclusion that not only is it okay, but it’s pretty cool that my girl does her own thing and stands by it. There are no rules to creativity.

But we do draw the line on where you choose to color (although a purple smiley face scribbled on the inside of the girls’ closet door begs to differ).

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Nella breaks the rules.

Weekending…
My shattered phone has been replaced but before I synced my contacts, I enjoyed a calm weekend with a quiet phone–which overlapped to a vacant computer and a mama caved-in. Heidi calls it “the cave”–the secret place we retreat to when we’re subconsciously overwhelmed or too busy. It usually involves–without even intention–ignoring the phone, letting e-mails stack up and hibernating to the inner depths of our homes where we bake, read books or, in my case, color. Retreating to the cave is a necessary occurance for me–a replenishing inverse from the go-and-do-and-see times. I like both ends of the spectrum–the thrill of adventure and showing my girls new things as well as the comfort and convenience of routine and feeling settled.

Holidays make me feel settled, and traditions like dyeing eggs connect me to all the puddles of nostalgic happiness that dwell so fondly in my memory and fuel me to recreate them for my own family. So we did. We colored eggs this weekend.

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I love that there is no reason behind this tradition. Or rather there is, but when I Googled the historical explanation, it didn’t excite me the same way that “because it’s fun” did. And I’m totally cool with doing elaborate things with my kids for no reason at all.

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There is something strangely thrilling about dunking these pure and delicate little ovoids (the proper name, I learned) into cups of color and waiting while they transform. Or watching as Lainey leans over to carefully check their color progression, tipping them just above the color line with her spoon and, like a stylist refolding the foil after inspecting unfinished highlights, she says “not quite yet” and slowly drops the egg back down.

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Nella, on the other hand, took every egg I handed her and threw it which, of course, thrilled her sister.

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We had to remove her from the situation as Lainey didn’t appreciate the way she handled the eggs.

Just as in coloring, I held back my dyeing critique and watched, cringing, as Lainey did it her own way–plopping two eggs into one cup, dipping them quickly from one hue to another, mixing dissonant colors, cracking shells and yet completely satisfied with her results.

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Turns out, the splotchiness adds to the beauty of her vibrant little egg art.

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The weekend would not have been complete without the following bit of unearthly loveliness. I actually have to stop and gather my thoughts for a moment because it is quite possible words will not do justice the deliciousness that is–there needs to be some kind of drumroll here–Haagen Dazs Five Lemon (stop, applaud, bow–it’s worthy). Add this to your Bag of Tricks, fo sho.

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My sister’s been telling me about it for a long time and I finally gave in and bought some while I browsed the grocery store waiting for Austyn and his friend to pick out a movie at the neighboring Blockbuster this weekend. You see that little hump of ice cream left in that picture? That’s what’s left after I used my finger as a spoon in the Publix parking lot. Only five ingredients–milk, sugar, eggs, cream and lemon–but more than five non-repeatable exclamations that followed my first bite. And I’m sure it’s like the coolest thing for a sixteen-year-old to have his friend along on the ride where his stepmom is driving twenty under the speed limit because she’s balancing navigating a steering wheel with shoveling ice cream with her finger.

Finally, our “caving it” weekend was completed with pruned toes.

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Like life, we swam both ends of the spectrum. The go-and-do-and-see of adventurous jumps and loud splashes…

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…and the calm repose of tranquil floats and quiet wading.

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Our new $10 kiddie pool makes water play much more fun and accessible for Nella.

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And it’s only April. It’s just beginning.

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Looking forward to some upcoming traveling, out of the cave, and plenty more retreats at home, in the cave, where we belong.

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Congratulations to the winner of the $40 gift certificate from The Meg Shop:
Comment #859, Kim: time. one of the things in my bag of tricks (for myself). observantly spent time. to find out what it is i need. often a couple of minutes is enough. take a breather, have a coffee/tea/wine and enjoy. simple as that. PS: that b/w pic of nella in her pjs has got to be one of the cutest ones ever! what a beauty.

Kim, please e-mail your contact info to kellehamptonblog@comcast.net, and you’ll soon be richer in the jewelry department.

Your “Bag of Tricks” were insightful, funny, and enjoyable to read. Thank you for sharing!

The full moon may symbolize crazy, hectic, frantic…

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Left, Saturday night; Right, Sunday night

…but our weekend was just what we ordered: over easy

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My girl and her kite-tail flowing hair.

Happy Monday.

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Filed Under: Holiday 173 Comments

Bag of Tricks

April 15, 2011 By Kelle

Behind the girls’ bedroom door, there is a purple bag hanging on a hook. Its canvas is worn and its woven straps are near threadbare, but inside there are treasures that keep my girls happy. It’s my Bag of Tricks–the first thing I grab when we’re out the door to a restaurant or guaranteed to be in the car for any extended period of time, and its contents–favorite books, paper dolls, pop beads and My Little Ponies–magically entertain an otherwise inconsolable child.

Photobucket pewter wand, Lisa Leonard Designs.

I’ve realized the past few days though, that mamas need a bag of tricks as well–a reserve of go-to comforts that vitalize our spirits when things aren’t quite right. And, amid the craziness of sleepless nights, neglected laundry piles and failed attempts at pretty much anything this week, I’ve become reacquainted with my bag of tricks and the simple self-preserving actions I do to renew and inspire.

If Motherhood was a Monopoly game, I’d have to say I dwell primarily on a hotel-stacked Boardwalk. I pass Go every morning when I pull my jammied babies out of bed, and I am making bank with my overall satisfaction of raising littles.

But this week, I’m stuck on Baltic Ave. And I guess, that’s just part of the game.

The hilarity of snafus this past week is honestly amusing. Sleepless nights, broken dishes, diapers ripped to shreds by dogs. You know, the usual.

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I am cute. But I was up from 1 to 5 for no reason.

I ran over a bottle of Crayola colored bubbles the other day in our driveway. The highly pigmented bubbles that leave a permanent trail of green syrup etched in the cement.

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I got lost on the way to Nella’s eye appointment in Miami and then forgot where I parked my car in a 6-story parking garage later. For half an hour, I held a sleeping baby while I spiraled ramps, clicking my keys and chasing down honks.

I cried on Alligator Alley because Nella was hysterical in the backseat and there were no exits for me to pull over and help her.

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We’re trying the amber teething necklace. We’ll see what happens.

I broke a bottle in my kitchen and a candle in World Market.

But–oh yes, there’s a but–I have a bag of tricks. And in Monopoly, that’s like Free Parking. Amid the tears, the broken glass, the honking car on the 6-story parking ramp, I forced myself to enjoy as many pleasures as I could. Simple things. A cold frosty from Wendy’s drive-through on the way home from Miami, a new home magazine at the grocery store, an NPR poetry reading I turned up in the car–the one that finally lulled Nella to sleep. I took the long way home yesterday, stopping at visitor centers to take pictures of the swamp.

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Look what I saw in the swamp. (I was safe, promise…and Nella was in the car)

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I even enjoyed a rare moment of folding clothes still warm from the dryer yesterday and strangely found comfort in pruning my fingers in a warm bucket of lemon suds–a far cry from my usual just-get-it-over-with attitude toward the half-hour cleaning shake-down.

When things are messy, good always rises to the surface if you wait for it.

Good=Miami skyline.

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Good=healthy eyes, a great appointment and still…no need for glasses.

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Good=my blooming gardenia bush.

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Good=Early evening driveway art.

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Lainey enjoyed a sleepover at Grandma’s last night, and after an impromptu girlfriend gathering over hot wings and cold beer last night, I am savoring a quiet morning with my coffee and my littlest girl.

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There is more in my bag of tricks, but I’ll save it for when I need it again.
We’re back on Boardwalk, baby.

**************************************************************************

Add this to your bag of tricks…something pretty dangling from your ears.

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The Meg Shop is back as a sponsor, and these white pearl curve earrings are pretty enough to bump your Baltic Ave. days up to, say at least St. James Place. Use code ENJOY10 for 10% off your order!

The Meg Shop is giving away a $40 gift certificate to a randomly selected commenter on this post.

To make it fun, tell me what’s in your bag of tricks? What self-preserving comforts do you allow yourself to bump your Baltic days to Boardwalk?

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 946 Comments

Random is Good.

April 13, 2011 By Kelle

Random things.

Afternoon Light.
There’s this magic spot in our yard that glows every day come six o’clock. And by glow, I mean sunlight generously pours through the woods and breaks into these golden beams that put on a show in the patch of grass under the big tree in our side yard. As long as it’s not cloudy, I’m guaranteed to catch a beam grazing the cheeks of my girls if they’re still enough.

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The Formidable Spider.
I am walking outside today–smiling, welcoming the sun, thinking about how much I love the $5 blue shoes I picked up in Key West–when suddenly I stepped right into the intricate web of an orb weaver spider. I knew it the second I felt its sticky threads adhere to my cheeks, and I completely flipped when I looked up to see the spiny back of this little mama just inches from my face.

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Stay in your web, little mama.

Night Swims.
Yesterday, we used our pool for the first time this year. It’s too expensive to heat it in the winter, but the sun is a close friend now, so a dip in the pool is no longer a shocking, breath-holding experience.

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But the night swims? Oh, the night swims. They are my favorite. There’s something magical about swimming in a moon-lit pool–scanning the black sky through the screen, searching for the Big Dipper, making shadow charades in the glow of the pool lights and tuning in to the accompaniment of crickets from the woods behind us. It feels very summer camp, and I hope my girls remember every bit of it.

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Superdogs.
Our dogs are badasses in more ways than one but mostly because they have survived the torment of a toddler who dresses them, showers them, wraps them in blankets and sometimes puts them in her play kitchen stove. Okay one time, but still.

Photobucket Wonder Twin Sophie. Super power: Barking at super-canine decibels that wake babies.

We Dance.
About a year ago, Brett pulled one of his random quirky little deeds. He rigged up a boom box in our garage to play continuous music–24/7. Not just any music…Country. And we’re not even really country folk. But the very fact that this is not really a fits-with-who-we-are kind of thing thrills me. I love that I forget the music is out there. Every time I fling the garage door open at any hour of the day to fetch an extra roll of paper towel, search for duct tape or head out to the car to dig for a lost lipstick, I am pleasantly surprised by the music.

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Hey Dad, yeah we stole your boombox. I’m gonna get you a really nice Father’s Day gift though.

Rule is: when you hear the music, you have to dance. So now, Nella knows the minute we walk into the garage, it’s bustamove time. And Girlfriend obliges.

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I love that she knows this. I love that there was once a day when I actually thought that our diagnosis meant my little girl wouldn’t do things like this, but she does. She remembers everything, and you cannot walk through the garage with Nella on your hip without stopping to give in to her hand-clapping, head-bouncing little pleas to dance.

Knowing when to dance is an imperative trait I want my children to inherit. And, in case you wondered, the answer to when is it a good time to dance? is…
…anytime you feel like it.

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The Two of Them.
Their bond is quiet but sure.

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We have begun to talk to Lainey here and there about Nella’s needs. It comes up naturally and not really that often, but there have been times when, out of concern for Lainey’s feelings, I’ve wanted her to know why therapists come to play with her little sister.

We don’t say much because not much is needed to be said. But I know my girls well. And I know the big sister gets it. I just know.

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No Explanation Needed.
I had to have them, okay?

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Nella Sleeps. Or Not.
Nella’s not a good sleeper. She still wakes up in the night and her naps are inconsistent. I can’t do the whole let-’em-cry-it-out thing, so I usually nurse and sing and sway until she’s out. And I honestly enjoy every second of that time–watching her knead my skin, play with her feet, slow her sucking until she’s melted into a heavy little slump in my arms.

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But lately, as still and sleeping as she seems at the end of this whole shtick, the second I carefully and quietly lay her in her crib, she miraculously shoots up and smiles. Today, I finally walked away, hoping she’d put herself back to sleep. After half an hour, I heard nothing. I was certain she’d done it–settled herself into slumber–so much I started planning the moves of my victory dance…until I walked in to confirm and found my quiet girl just like this:

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Silent. Awake. Adorable.

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Fine Motor.
She holds a piece of chalk like it’s her job. And she knows what to do with it. Sister colors the cement, no problem. Lainey taught her.

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Little Friends.
Lainey’s friend spent the day with us today, and I was delighted with the dynamics of three girls–two that were off and running, one that stayed glued to her mama.

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Nella’s new favorite–frozen yogurt tubes.

But they all joined forces for lunch in the woods.

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Ebay.
Lainey grew out of her old hand-me-down cowboy boots, and she wanted real “cowboots” for her birthday party. I found these leather beauties on Ebay for $12, and I love them. The leather smells rich, feels appropriately worn-in, and there are two holes at the top, perfect for her little fingers to slip into while she pulls them on.

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Can’t Get Enough of…

…this simple salad Heidi got me turned on to. Arugla, cilantro, half a sqeezed lime and sea salt.

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Spring photo from a few weeks ago I never posted:

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Dresses for Grandma’s wedding next month

Got Yogurt?

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Blog Videos
The awesome folks at Babble have put together 5 video segments featuring moms talking about different blogging issues. Today’s video, the first of the series, discusses deciding how personal to get…and, for the record, I’m still getting used to Skype.

Check it out HERE.

The week’s almost over. Enjoy!

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 228 Comments

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