Enjoying the Small Things

Enjoying the Small Things

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Remembering

September 11, 2011 By Kelle

I was sitting in the green chair in my grandma and grandpa’s living room, eating oatmeal from a tray my grandma had brought me–like she did every morning before I headed off to classes. My grandpa sat across from me in his recliner, his bad leg stretched out and his cocker spaniel loyally perched at the end of his chair. He sipped his coffee and hollered for my grandma to come take his tray while we watched the morning news. Like always, he volleyed channels between The Today Show, Fox News and CNN, reaching for the remote every time a commercial appeared, and he made good grandfatherly conversation with me in between headlines. Like asking what tests I had coming up and how much more I had to write on that British Literature paper I was procrastinating finishing.

This was our routine.

My hair was still wet and I was running late, so I ate quickly, skipping the mug of thick apricot nectar my grandma had poured to accompany my breakast. She poured it for me every morning; I skipped it every morning, but either she didn’t notice or perhaps was persistent and thought I’d eventually drink what she was certain to be good for me.

And then Matt Lauer cut his story short and said a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. And we talked about what could possibly have gone wrong until we watched, live, as the second plane hit. My grandma peered around from the kitchen and the three of us stared, silently, and suddenly I wasn’t so hungry.

I skipped my classes that day, instead choosing to stay near my grandpa’s chair where it felt safe. I drank cup after cup of my grandma’s weak coffee, nervously fingering the handle of my mug while we watched footage for hours of sirens, fires, smoke and fear. I called my dad, my mom, my sister, my brother, my friends. By late afternoon I was emotionally exhausted from forcing myself to imagine what it would be like. To be on that plane, to be in that building, to be wondering if the person I loved made it out alive. I asked my grandpa questions and drank up his answers. He was smart and experienced and strangely calm through the disturbing images of horror I’ll never forget. He prayed out loud with my grandma and me, eloquently bellowing words intended for the victims of that day but comforting me instead.

I remember I had had enough come evening. I laid on my bed and cried because I was scared. I was twenty-two years old and felt the vulnerability of a young child who needed to be scooped up and protected, and I was embarrassed for how scared I felt–for how naive I was of world issues, politics, terrorism, relationships between people and countries. I thought it was the end of us all.

I’ll never forget what my grandpa told me that night. I walked into his office in my pajamas and sat next to his desk where he had just finished his nightly ham radio session. He wasn’t usually the person I approached during emotional breakdowns but, for some reason, he was the one who would calm my fears–I knew it.

“What’s going to happen?” I asked him, crying.

And he smiled and told me that yes, it was sad and yes, this would greatly affect us. But then he said, “Listen to this old man. I’ve been around for a long enough time to see a lot of bad things happen. I’ve seen devastation in a lot of parts of the world, but people overcome. They always overcome. It will be okay.”

I’ve thought of these words so many times in my life and, of course, at that moment had no idea just how much his wisdom would mean years later after he was gone. But it’s true. We overcome.

Something happened between that fateful day ten years ago and today’s memorial that has changed the way I look at the events and effects of September 11. I had children. And everything–everything seems to matter so much more. I don’t know how to make sense of it all, and it’s difficult to weigh the importance of the safety of our children and our country with the greater principle of changing the world to a place of compassion and peace. I’ve shielded Lainey’s eyes this week from the memorable images of that day–protecting her from things her little 4-year-old mind doesn’t need to know quite yet. And yet I want her to know someday because it’s important.

And what will I tell her? I don’t know. I hope that her world and the world of her children will be so much better than ours. And when my mind stretches and trails off dangerously to a future that overwhelms me, I rein it in to the comfortable, focused task of today. You teach compassion and love. You live compassion and love. I can handle that today.

What do you remember from that day?

Filed Under: Uncategorized 199 Comments

I like you.

August 29, 2011 By Kelle

Today, I bid farewell to Coffee. Our relationship goes way back, and we’ve certainly had our starry-eyed moments like that one hot fireside date in Utah when he slayed me with his foamy cap, his rich and creamy sips, his double shot of caffeine. Oh, he’s slick, that coffee. But his caffeinated dark side’s been messing with my body, and I wanted to explore other options–date other drinks, you know. So I’m in the early stages of a relationship with this barley chicory root dude even though I’m not really the barley chicory root kind of girl. Our first date went well. With a little half & half, he has nice photogenic swirling capabilities. He says he has beet and fig extract which sounds like a pick-up line, but he called me for a second date, so we’ll see how it goes.

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*****

We enjoyed a weekend of ebb & flow.

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Flowing out of the house for a birthday party, a grocery run, a trip to Grandma’s and receding back home for Hi Ho Cherry-O, pajama lounging, and an important board meeting of the dolls where they discussed stock options and whose fake hair wouldn’t stay in a pony-tail.

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Okay, I’m sorry. Lainey says it’s not a meeting. They are camping. My bad.



Saturday, we ventured out and about with a litter of Minnie Mice for Lainey’s friend Aleena’s birthday party:

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It was, as Minnie Mouse herself would say, so adorable.

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Nella discovered a new state of ecstasy with this lolipop. Like she knew it wasn’t really for babies, so she went to town licking the bejesus out of it before I could take it away.

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And the ears would have never made it to her head had she not fallen asleep. She’s getting picky about headwear.

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Lainey accompanied me for some routine errands Sunday morning, and I realized–as much as I always love to be with my kids, it’s shifting from less of a responsiblity of taking her with me into more of an experience of complete pleasure. She buckles her own car seat, she tells me funny stories in the car, she helps me find oranges with thick skins and no soft spots, and she walks next to me–confidently yet ever-so-gently holding the edge of my skirt while I push our cart.

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Her presence has flourished from daughter who makes me happy to little friend who makes me laugh. Who keeps me company.

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As we were leaving the grocery store, I pushed my cart with the crazy wheel (This is a given. I am now sure I was predestined in life to only push carts with crooked, dragging, screaming squeaky wheels.) back to the car and encouraged my girl to buckle up while I loaded up the back. She stopped before she climbed in, looked up with her milk chocolate eyes and her infamous shy smile and said, “I like you.”

We say “I love you” all the time–so much it sometimes trickles off our tongue without thought. But this was different. This time, like meant so much more than love, and I knew she carefully chose her sentence, just like I would carefully choose mine.

I put my bag down, squeezed her and smiled back. “I like you too, Lainey. Very, very, very much. You’re my friend, and I like being with you.”

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I like you–it’s simple, especially for a gushy girl like me, but I want to say it more because it feels so authentic and certainly far less used than love. And maybe that’s what’s changed with outings with my girl. I’ve always loved being with her, but I realized Sunday morning as I tilted my rear view mirror to watch her silver clogs kick to the rhythm of the music on the way home…

…I like being with her.

And I very much liked the rest of the weekend.

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We spent Sunday afternoon with Grandma Colleen or, as Lainey says, Gramma Caleen.

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And finally, today was a little preview for tomorrow.

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Heavy skies and a best friend smitten with pregnancy sickness prompted a half day of hiding under quilts, watching While You Were Sleeping (in my top ten rainy day feel-good movie collection), and forking into our homemade cherry pie while it was still steaming so that browned crust collapsed like pot holes into hot cherries underneath.

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The extra “baby pie” we make with every pie now.



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And nothing makes me happier than hearing silence for too long, running to check on trouble, and finding four kids–Nella included–just a hangin’.

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Tomorrow is TURN IT OFF day for us. I’m looking forward to it. No T.V., no computer, no e-mail, no texting. All day. I honestly don’t know the last time I spent a full day disconnected from the world, and I have a feeling I’ll draw some insights from the clarity I’ll experience. Perhaps caffeine isn’t the only demon that’s been messing with my mojo. I’ll be back on Wednesday to write about it in a Hallmark sponsored post.

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Thank you, Aunt Rebecca, for Nella’s boots. She finally fits them!



*****

Giveaway winner for Bubblewish Light Set: Comment #139, Lace Escapades:

I babysit a little girl who does the exact same thing with her bike, so by the time we start walking home, I’m giving her a piggy-back ride while pushing her bike as well! 🙂

Congratulations, Lace Escapades! Please e-mail your contact info to kellehamptonblog@comcast.net.



Wring out the last bits of summer sun with a Popina retro swimsuit…a nice last hurrah to summer, if you wish.

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Tomorrow morning I will go to second base with a cup of chickory root and enjoy my girls, uninterrupted. I think I’m going to love it. No, I think I’m going to like it.

Happy Monday to you and you and you.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized 203 Comments

Bloom

August 25, 2011 By Kelle

So I saw a link on Facebook this morning that led to a book with my name on it, and I had to laugh. I didn’t know it was out there yet–there, of course, being the vast land of Internet Kingdom. But there it was, so I wanted to share it with you.

From the horse’s mouth (and I do have big teeth)…

A memoir about perspective and finding beauty in the unexpected:

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Bloom will be available in April, 2012 from William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins. We have lots of fun to entertain us until then. Like sisters who dump old Christmas cards in our front entrance and play with them all morning.

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I’ll keep you posted when it gets closer, but I do want to thank all of you for sharing our journey. It makes it extra special, and this book truly wouldn’t be possible without you. Surreal, really. So, thank you. That is all.

Order a copy, pre-sale, at any of the following links: Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Books a Million, and Indiebound.

Filed Under: Uncategorized 265 Comments

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