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Going Home, Coming Home

December 10, 2015 By Kelle

I flew home to Michigan early this week to celebrate my dad’s retirement party and flew home last night, truly full after some heavy family time and all the Christmassy things we packed into a few short days. As evidenced: my dad and Gary picked me up from the airport wearing Santa hats and had another one waiting for me in the car. We pretty much just rode a virtual sleigh for the rest of the week.

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Also, this is what “Act Normal” looks like for us:

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After my initial Oh-my-God, I’m-in-a-box-that’s-flying-through-the-sky-and-held-up-by-nothing-but-some-opposite-forces observation/panic that begins all of my flights home, I went into the familiar reflection that the space in the sky between two homes provides. I’ve been there many times before, mentally transitioning between going home to be a daughter and coming home to be a mother; feeling small and safe and protected at the same time I feel large, the safe place, the protector.

Seated on the plane, I fished through my purse to find a pen and smiled when I pulled out the one my dad let me use the other day—the one he retrieved from the inside pocket of his sport jacket and handed to me, like he’s done many times, with, “Always have a good pen on you, Kelle. I always have two. And don’t settle for those cheap things.” In our family, we talk about pen types like car models. This one was a Pilot Precise Rolling Ball—V7 to be exact. Glides nice. Thin tip but good distribution of ink. I opened my journal and wrote a few memories I wanted to remember from the week. Falling asleep next to the fire with my siblings in the same room. Feeling the cold wind behind me from the sliding glass door I purposely left open while I wrapped up tighter in the electric blanket, the same one I used through winters when I was in college. Sipping drinks around the table at my favorite restaurant on Main Street, telling stories about our childhood, remembering my grandparents, watching my dad pull out his credit card and hand it to the waitress with a proud “I got this” as if the simple act of paying for his kids’ meals gave him a good surge of that protector/safe place/largeness that parenthood grants. And yet I saw just moments earlier—when we were talking about his mom—the need to be held up, to belong to someone, that never really goes away.

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I heard a lot of stories this week. At my dad’s retirement party, friends he’s worked with over the years, patients whose hands he’s held through losing loved ones and family who drove in special to celebrate, all shared stories about the last thirty years since he started his job. “I wanted to tell you how I met your dad,” one woman explained to me, her eyes already pooling with tears. “Many years ago, I was here in the hospital and had just received some really sad news. I was making my way through the main hallway back to my car, and everything suddenly overwhelmed me. My knees buckled and I started to fall to the ground, but someone caught me. Out of nowhere, a hand grabbed my elbow and lifted me up. I turned around, and there was your dad–a complete stranger. He lifted me up that day, he helped me, and I came back to volunteer for him here later. I just thought you should know that.”

In a way, I already did.

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Whether it’s holiday nostalgia or the evaluation of where we are and where we’re going at the end of the year, I think a lot about belonging this time of year. I want my kids to feel a strong sense of home, of belonging to this family and being loved by us. I cozy up everything—hang twinkle lights, play music, tuck them in at night with winter poems. Bake cookies, keep traditions, watch movies snuggled into the couch with blankets, searing memories into my own minds as well as theirs. At the same time, I feel my own needs to belong—I miss my family back home, I want my mom’s cinnamon rolls, I remember what it feels like to fall asleep with new pajamas, snuggled in bed with my brother and sister, waiting for the magic the next morning will bring. I think about what this all means—the holiday, the things I used to believe, the things I believe now. Who do we really belong to? I feel strong and secure in my uncertainty, in the openness of all the possibilities and yet this time of year, sometimes I miss the ceiling and walls of the church where I felt scared/confined/judged but also quiet/inspired, especially when no one talked, when candles were lit on Christmas Eve and the flicker of lights would dance on the stained glass windows. Where I could close my eyes and listen to the choir sing “Silent Night” and for a moment feel like I completely belonged…to what, I don’t know, but I felt it. I feel sad especially this time of year for the people who don’t feel a place of belonging, and in my own little holiday quest to make my children feel warmth, to find my own warmth, I try and let that sadness seep in—to teach it to my kids—because it’s important.

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(My brother and I picked out this house–the one at the top of the hill, with the fire crackling inside. This one’s home.)

I let it all seep in last night, while I temporarily belonged to the middle space of clouds and dark sky lit only by the tiny blinking lights of the plane’s wing. The woman in the seat next to me could have easily been my grandma—late 70’s probably, her white hair brushed and sprayed into a perfect round fluff like the top of a cotton candy cone; her hands, like my grandma’s, maps to where she’s been—lots of wrinkles, faded brown spots and large purple veins that run like rivers from her fingers to her wrist. I was too tired to talk, but I looked over nosily at the Woman’s Day magazine she was intently reading, the open spread full of holiday recipes and craft how-to’s: Spiced Cider, Scented Sachets, Cozy Mug Cuffs. She dog-eared the page, and I fist-bumped her in my mind for her holiday spirit before trying to figure out which of the three ungodly sleep-on-a-plane positions I’d attempt (weird side curl, crooked neck hunch or seat tray head drop). I opted for the latter, opened my tray table and hunched over it, stuffing my scarf between my head and my crossed arms. I didn’t think I’d stay there long but found myself waking up, what had it been—30, 40 minutes later?—opening my eyes to the horror that I had slumped over and was resting the entire weight of my head in the woman’s lap. Embarrassed, I slowly resurrected, yawned and tried to play it off. “Sorry, guess I was more tired than I realized,” I quipped.

She smiled a smile I’ve been lucky to see many times in my life. “I was holding you up,” she answered.

There’s so much to belong to, there’s more than one thing holding us up. The forces of flight, the people we love, the stranger next to us who shows up out of nowhere and lifts us, the stranger next to us who needs us to show up and lift her. We belong to all of them.

The wheels of the plane found the ground, the rumble of the landing quieted, and I pulled out my phone to text my dad:

Landed. I’m home.

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Filed Under: Family, Holiday, Home 39 Comments

The Nutcracker

December 7, 2015 By Kelle

This one’s for the feelers.

I suppose childhood memories slowly evaporate as we get older–mine have at least, leaving me with fuzzy recollections of the early years except for some weirdly specific things: reading the Weekly Reader in Mrs. Rizzi’s first grade class and discussing the tragedy of the Challenger blowing up; digging through the bag of clothes our rich neighbors gave us to find, like, four Esprit sweatshirts; bringing home a new hamster only to realize after watching it chew threw its cardboard transport box on the way home that it was possessed by a demon.

I wonder sometimes if we subconsciously dull the painful memories, if we piece together what we want to remember, if we store the good ones in a safer place–I mean, I find myself doing it with memories from just two weeks ago. Or maybe there’s a rating system, some algorithm in our brain that calculates the level of goodness or badness in our life’s events and scales how well we will remember an event according to how much we’ll need to remember it. Whatever the case, I remember Christmas–all of them, and maybe the most meaningful memories when things were in the shambliest of shambles.

It makes sense, really. If you map it out on a Venn Diagram, Christmas was the center circle for all the characters in my life to shine: a gay dad who loves to decorate and has strong opinions about spruce vs. fir; a crafty mom who bakes, sews and plays Christmas hymns by heart on the piano; pastor grandpas and uncles all hosting Christmas Eve services and practicing their Advent sermons, and musician cousins whose December calendars were full of Christmas choir practice and Live Nativity rehearsals. We were only short a toy maker, a Christmas tree farmer and a cocoa connoisseur. Other than that, we were straight-up Claus–almost full-bloods, and Christmas was when my family did what we do best. So much so that when things fell apart–when my parents divorced and we were separated from my dad–I remember lying in bed at night, making myself think of Christmas because that was my safest, homiest, happiest place: in the family room on Horseshoe Drive, at night, next to the Christmas tree, listening to Karen Carpenter sing “Mary Christmas, Darling.” The traditions–the cinnamon rolls, the candlelight services, the trips to my grandparents, the oranges in the toes of the stockings, the feeling on the coldest of nights that I was in the warmest of places–they are great gifts, setting a foundation for investing in family ritual and comfort practices.

With all the goodness and magical memories of Christmas comes a certain sadness though–not overshadowing or terribly obvious, just quietly present. I feel it more the older I get–this strange emptiness parasite that attaches to the joy–what is it? Fear that it’s going to be taken away? Awareness that it’s slipping, shifting, evolving–that childhood memories and adulthood reality are two totally different things? An emotional trigger for the buried stuff? Or is it subconscious preparation for the inevitable–the year it really is different because somebody got sick, we lost someone we love, a change we couldn’t control came in and made everything we know different? Even though I find ridiculous delight in clipping triangles into paper snowflakes and pulling my sugar cookies out of the oven at just the right second for perfectly golden edges, I feel it–the other side of the happy holiday coin–the one that, for one tiny second, makes me envious of people who can slip past these last days of December like any other day of the year–book a cruise, skip the decorations, I don’t know–maybe not cry at every other commercial.

To Thine Own Self Be True though…she said as she raised that holiday freak flag one notch higher. It’s that Claus bloodline. So this weekend we celebrated, continuing our tradition of seeing the Nutcracker (me and the girls–Dash will join us when I feel he will a: enjoy it, b: sit through it, c: not put us on the “permanently banned” list at the Philharmonic).

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Our Nutcracker day started early in the morning with a Nutcracker breakfast–tiny pancake stacks and egg cups and the Nutcracker music, songs which Lainey’s starting to distinguish. “This one’s the Spanish dancers,” “this is the snowflakes dance,” or my favorite, “here’s that one that makes you cry.”
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And then a drawn-out getting ready session, one I’ll look back on as embodying everything about raising two little girls–digging through drawers to find clean tights; pulling dresses over hands held high above their head; brushing through tangled hair, promising to be gentle; pulling too hard and correcting with an “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I’m sorry;” regaining their trust for a good tight braid, a clip of a barrette, a twist of the curling iron; dabbing puckered lips with gloss; leading them to the mirror to see themselves knowing that no matter how big they smile, how impressed they might seem, no one in the world can possibly see them as beautiful as I do.

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I took them to the Ritz Carlton for lunch first, a fancy far from ordinary experience for us and an opportunity to see the famous gingerbread house our Ritz makes every year.

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This one-room house is made from homemade gingerbread and decorated with candy and pretzels and shredded wheat squares. Its creators, I’m thinking, are distant Claus cousins.

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The girls liked the fancy towels in the bathroom.

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And we proved once again that we are not civilized or graceful enough to pull off this Ritz thing. We found a hallway for a twirling session that turned into a giggle fest as they purposely fell to the ground and Nella made toot noises.

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The whole thing felt special, this little holiday memory that lights our festive fire.

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I bought tickets for three seats, but the two next to me were vacant throughout the entire show while my girls sat in my lap, Nella falling asleep shortly after the second act started. I was totally okay with that.

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(practicing her ballet moves during intermission)

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There’s only thing to do through all of this stuff…the good, the hard, the highs, the lows, the festive, the ordinary…feel it, feel it all.

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Merry, merry. Happy Monday (just as special a day as weekends to enjoy it, feel it and make memories, by the way).

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Filed Under: Holiday 22 Comments

Shrinky Dinks Wine Tags

December 3, 2015 By Kelle

I love incorporating kids’ art for special gifts for grandparents. Last year, we turned some drawings into mugs and mouse pads. This year, we’re making these little bundles:

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Shrinky Dinks wine tags.

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Super easy, using Shrinky Dink Refill Sheets, Hoop Wine Glass Charms, a small hole punch and colored pencils. Have your kids make drawings on the Shrinky Dink paper and color them in with colored pencils. Cut them out, punch a hole and bake according to directions. They’ll shrink up and get thick in a matter of a few minutes. Poke a hoop charm through each one when finished and wrap the set in a cute little bag. Combine them with a nice bottle of wine, some personalized coasters with pictures of the kids, and Voila! A lovely gift.

Lainey made a set of fruit tags. The beet and the carrot kill me.

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Now if you’ll excuse me, Nella is tapping me incessantly, asking to see the “blueberry toot” commercial which makes my kids roar.

Filed Under: Holiday, Make Stuff 5 Comments

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