Tuesday marks the first day of school for both J & O.
I have a dining room table full of school supplies that are mismatched and disorganized as neither of my two attempts at brick-&-mortar shopping nor my attempted Amazon prime deliveries yielded the full list of requested supplies and donations for their classrooms. Things need to be divided, labeled, bagged up.
I have a long grocery list of dinner and packed lunch supplies to pick up tomorrow, now complicated by a weekend email that indicated our intended entree for O (PB&J) as well as the preferred fruit (strawberries) are associated with severe allergies for children in his class, and therefore barred from entry.
Until just a few nights ago, I had a stack of papers still left over from J’s end of Kindergarten events, which warranted being reviewed, tossed, or saved in the filing folder system I’m hoping will be somewhat sustainable as the boys age and accrue what I can only assume will be exorbitant amounts of priceless and sentimental intellectual property (says their mother).
And then there is this looming dread of operating by a new set of logistics. Even summer mornings are a bit much, and now we will have 2 that have to be walking out to the bus at 7:43am. They will need to be picked up from the after care program at school on the south side of town before 6pm. A and C have daycare on the east side of town, flexible in start time but also needing a pickup by 6pm. I drive by the daycare on my way to the highway and on my way home, but my meetings start no later than 9am, which means I could take the littles in if I can get there by 7:45 to be on the road by 8, but then I miss the bus stop, which is a 10 minute window of my morning that I genuinely love. Either way, Dave and I need to predetermine who takes what car and picks up which set of boys each day as the car seat configuration is anything but flexible. We are 30 hours out from go-time and have yet to devote the brain space to figure this out.
So when Dave asked me if I wanted to steal away for the long weekend up north, I said ‘no.’ Too much to do, and there was no chance I’d be in a good head space Monday night if I was behind the 8 ball just prior to the first day of 1st grade and Junior Kindergarten. No. No, thank you, but no.
He made his case simply: “the boys are about to start school again. We won’t have that many occasions when we can all get away together for the next many months. If we can make it work, I feel like we should.”
Partially because Dave asks next to nothing of me and therefore I try to oblige when he does, and partially because I knew he was objectively right, I agreed. We went up north.
But as I’ve observed many times before yet clearly not fully internalized, it is not simply about a change of scenery. Rather, it’s about the active choice to step away from the to do list and obligations that otherwise spur many of the decisions of how we spend our time. In the list of things we did, none of them are unique to being away from home. In fact, this entire list could have been written in a regular weekend less than 10 minutes from home. During this weekend, we:
- – Did a grocery run.
- – Played hide and seek at a playground and among the trees.
- – Went bowling.
- – Moderated brotherly squabbles roughly 30x/day.
- – Let the older bros stay up too late with the acknowledgment we will pay for this during the coming school week.
Because we were “away” (physically, but also mentally from the mental ticker tape of things we should be dividing in order to conquer), however, both Dave & I experienced these commonplace things like this:
- – Grocery run – the first time the boys visited a store with the kid-sized carts and how unbelievably excited they were to help! We ended up with 3 versions of granola bars when every boy insisted on picking their own flavor.
- – Hide and Seek – A is still evidently unclear on rules and – when you announce ‘ready or not, here I come!’ – he will pop out from his hiding spot behind a tree, shrieking “I FOUND YOU!” It made me laugh every. single. time. Plus we meandered over to the nearby skate park, only to realize it was overrun with kids no older than 12 who were zipping around on their scooters. J watched, mesmerized, and a new hobby was born (radiologists all over the country are now shuddering as another little boy increases his odds of needing an X-ray).
- – Bowling – our first time with the boys, and we had no idea how fun this would be when you throw in bumpers and the ramp tools they have ready for kids — to say nothing of the “glow” environment even at 12pm. We had a delicious lunch of greasy bar food, I only barely won (yes, also utilizing bumpers), and the boys were asking to go back the very next day.
- – Brotherly squabbles – no romanticizing this; it’s just the nature of the beast in our home.
- – Staying up late – because who is going to call it a night when their children are animatedly running down the beach trying to find the best stones to skip, or finally getting the hang of a game of Frisbee with their dad, or laughing raucously at whatever 3 x small children find so funny long after lights-out at bedtime?
It shouldn’t require physical space to get to this point of mental clarity and appreciation for how beautiful the every day can be, but for me, it certainly helps.
I know this to be true: routine is huge for me at this stage in life. Routine allows me to operate on auto-pilot while my mind is trying to track 3 steps ahead of whatever we all need. Routine allows me to delegate effectively when I need to tap out or ask for help. Routine allows me to compartmentalize and keep the train in motion — for my self, and for my family. I love — I mean, love — a solid, predictable, effective routine.
But routines are not memorable. Memories stem from the stand-out moments, whether those are truly extraordinary moments, or moments within the realm of the ordinary, but with extra attention paid. This weekend was all about the latter: ordinary moments with extraordinary attention paid.
I’m still behind on back-to-school prep, but I have a feeling when I look back, I’ll remember J’s first strike bowling, and not the fact that I didn’t have his spare gym shoes ready and labeled before his first day.
Related: the trick to quality time that I picked up from my mom // the bus stop: my parental focus group
THE “LIFE WITH BOYS” EDITION
*****
At A’s 3 year well check:
Pediatrician: oh dear, look at all these bruises on you, A! Where did these all come from? *Pauses and, when he doesn’t answer, looks up at me expectantly*
Me (literally starts to laugh out loud): oh I’m sorry, do you actually think I can keep track of this information with four boys??
July 2022
*****
Closing in on 30 minutes of an attempted family photo shoot during which the boys went from various states of jumping to fighting to running around and dragging props across the studio floor:
Photographer: you know what, let’s just… let’s just embrace the motion. Dave, Kel, why don’t you stand in the middle and we’ll have the boys just… um, how about they run in a circle around you??
July 2022
*****
Walking over to a play date at a friend’s house:
Me: please make sure to mind your manners when you’re over there, okay, J? Share toys, take turns, and try to be extra nice to Weston’s little sister. Do you remember her name?
J: um… no.
Me: it’s Cameron. It’s her house, too, so please make sure to include her and be kind if she wants to play with you guys.
J: okay. So… wait. Is she his… little brother? Or big brother?
— July 2022, 7 years old
*****
As I was typing up this post, I received the following Google Opinion Rewards survey prompt. If there was a “1000% yes I have but TBH I have had better” option, I would have selected it from the drop-down menu.
Related: tell me you’re a boy mom without telling me you’re a boy mom // pronoun confusion
Since I began this chapter of life not quite 8 years ago, I have spent 3 years growing babies, 3.5 years nursing babies, and 1.25 years in between during which I was a free agent (minus that whole still being legally and ethically and financially and existentially responsible for said babies).
I weaned C last week, and did so without turning into a blubbery, emotional mess — another feather in my cap of motherhood accomplishments, thankyouverymuch. But really, while the sentimentality of the moment threatened to get the best of me, I faced it with 2 strategies:
- Some good, old-fashioned repression
- A healthy dose of self-reflection and gratitude
During these many years, I gained weight. My feet grew. My breasts shrank… and grew… and then shrank even more. I lost so much hair that I once clogged a hotel shower drain after only 3 washes. I limited the types of medication I could take based on potential interactions with the baby or my milk supply. Per the number of blood draws and IVs I’ve undergone, I can say with full medical confidence that I have “tricky veins” — that it’s worth calling the expert CRNA before the floor nurses “blow out” all the traditionally comfortable places to insert an IV and someone ends up needing to change my blood-spattered towels before the action even begins. I missed meetings, and social events, and sleep to hook myself up to a breast pump, where I spent hundreds of hours isolated and with an uncomfortable resignation to feeling like an animal.
Most of all, I grew and delivered and sustained 4 babies.
For the very real and very permanent price my body has paid over these intensely high-stakes years, and for the off-the-charts positive ROI as a result of that price, I officially adopt a near-zero tolerance policy for any negative body talk. I am not (usually) one for overt and shameless self-congratulations, but this moment feels like it warrants an exception: what. a. champ.
Finally, it’s helpful to remember that this milestone is not just about me. Each time I wean, it means more opportunities for Dave to participate and enjoy the tender bedtime routine with his sons. Clearly, he is quite effective at soothing to sleep.
Related: announcing my pregnancy with C // I come back to this anytime I typo “pregnant”
When I was young – long before having children – I remember sitting around the dinner table when one of my aunts told me that she never found out the baby’s sex for any of her five pregnancies. Some of my cousins were aghast: how could you not find out when the information was available to you??
There are so few true surprises in life, she ruminated. The moment you meet your baby is among the best, the most beautiful. “It’s a boy!!” “It’s a girl!!” Why would you want to deprive yourself of that wonderful moment?
I was sold. I knew then that I would only find out my own child’s sex on its birthday. And because I went on to marry a (wise) man who followed my lead on all decisions related to pregnancies and preferences, this is exactly what we did.
Many people were shocked when they found out we were waiting to be surprised. “I could never do it; I’m too much of a planner,” they would often tell me. But nursery design, or baby registry supplies, or name selection, or even simply being able to better picture the life growing inside of me… none of these were compelling enough reasons for me to trade for that best, most beautiful surprise moment.
On J’s birthday (7 years ago tomorrow), I go into labor and have an infant in my arms only 7 hours later. It is fast and furious, and because it’s my first, I misunderstand and think the level of pain is going to sustain for the better part of the entire day. I certainly don’t realize that it’s so intense because I am already nearing the end by the time I’m in triage. I ask for an epidural, and the medical staff challenges me, saying that by the time it takes effect, the baby will basically already be here anyway. I insist, they relent, but then they challenge me again, saying they will not provide it unless I can stop writhing in pain during the now relentlessly frequent contractions. When my doctor arrives, I ask if it’s too late for a c-section — surely something is wrong internally that is causing this level of pain, and it feels as though organs are being ripped apart from the inside my body (spoiler: it is too late, this is standard fare for child delivery, I am having things ripped apart from the inside of my body, and ohmygoshhowhasthehumanspeciessurvivedthislong). He tells me to push, and two is all it takes.
There I am, breathless, sweaty, feeling both completely out-of-body and also desperately attuned to my body as I lay in the hospital bed. Someone places the baby on my chest. I am crying and laughing, and vaguely aware that it’s still possible the doctor miscalculated and although I did indeed deliver a baby, I am also dying of something that has clearly gone terribly wrong for me to be in that much pain.
Many months after this moment, I had a revelation. I missed the surprise! I was right there, I was a very active participant in the moment, but I fully missed the surprise.
Did the doctor shout, “it’s a boy!” as he pulled the baby from me? Did the nurse say it and smile as she placed him in my arms? Did they show Dave and have him proudly relay the news? Did I simply look at the baby and draw the connection without thinking about it??
For all the money in the world, I cannot answer this question. All I remember is thinking “oh thank God it’s over, and here’s a baby” in a state of elated shock. To be honest, had an airplane flown through the room in those moments, I’m not sure I’d have noticed even that. I somehow knew he was a boy, but I 100% missed the surprise.
In the end, I do think there’s something fitting about this “miss” in my first moments as a mother. Because though that first moment with my son was nothing like this grand, romantic vision I had concocted pre-children, it absolutely was the best and most beautiful.
We are closing in on my firstborn’s 7th birthday. All of the boys’ birthdays are an opportunity to step back and reflect with fascination and pride on the tremendous growth a child accomplishes in 12 months. But there’s something about the first. You watch your firstborn develop and change and you have never been here before. You have precedents from every stage before — set by that firstborn — but every tomorrow is brand new for both of you.
I have been a mom for many years now, but I have never been a mom to a 7 year old.
Similar to last year, a few anecdotes that describe what J is like in this, his last month of being 6 years old.
1. Great intentions. I asked J to hang up his towel after his bath this evening. I walked through my bathroom shortly thereafter and saw this (below). While the execution is sometimes lacking, this is a boy who is happy to help, eager to please, and exceptionally rational (particularly when it comes to cause-and-effect of, say, chore-and-privilege). He is still — as he’s always been — easy; easy-tempered, easy-going, and easy-to-reason-with.
2. “Easy” should not be confused with “low-energy.” I can’t embed a video file, but see below for a series of screenshots our Nest doorbell camera captured from a ~1.2 second moment in time. This is J just, you know, exiting the house. As he bursts out of the door somehow already 18 inches off the ground, the accompanying audio is of him channeling a martial-arts-style yell. He then casually trots across the lawn in the direction of the neighbors’ house. The nuttiest part is that his mind somehow has even more boundless energy, constantly whirring such that you can almost hear him processing new information contextually against things he’s learned before. He does not accept perfunctory explanations, will challenge inconsistencies in your logic, and then go on to beat you handily in a footrace.
3. On the cusp of something new. He is still so sweet, asking me to sign “I love you” as his bus pulls away — insisting I continue until they drive completely out of sight. He plays peek-a-boo with C, holds A’s hand on walks, and laughs so genuinely at O’s antics such that it feels less like a connection borne of brotherly convenience and more a true friendship. He doesn’t care if he leaves the house with comically obvious bedhead. He cries with the most heartfelt histrionics when he falls off his bike and skins his knee. He likes to imagine he’s the Flash, or Sonic the Hedgehog, or a dragon.
But he has 2 of his permanent teeth now. He was subtly trying to brag to a little girl at the playground recently that he could skip bars on the monkey bars “without even trying.” He starts statements with “yo” (as in, “yo, that ice cream is so good”) since he started watching videos on YouTube Kids of other people playing Minecraft. His legs look so long to me as he pauses getting dressed in the morning to show me how cool his new “boxers” are. He is literate!
He is growing up. I’m not sure when the switch will flip (per above: firstborn), but it can’t be long before the little boy innocence fades compared to the traits that I’ll come to associate with his identity as a bona fide young man.
Frankly, maybe we’re already there. If that’s the case, and if this is the early preview of the adult he will grow into… I feel pretty good about that.
*****
^I began drafting this post this afternoon. During the evening, the boys were in charge of cleaning their room, and J took O’s bath towel downstairs to “hang it up to dry.” Clearly I need to be more specific about what constitutes a satisfactory place to hang a towel…
lemonade stands are
classic, but hustlers sell snacks
to an empty beach.
THE “MOM HAS EVERYTHING UNDER CONTROL” EDITION
Dave was traveling for business recently, so I was single-momming and – proudly – made it to all morning bus stop drops with 4 x children dressed, changed, fed, limbs attached, and on time. On the other hand, the following statements were also made during the course of the week:
*****
O, happily skipping away from the bathroom in the final minute before we need to leave for school: the toilet is clogged, Mom! So you need to tell Dad!
4 years old
*****
O, solemnly from the backseat of the car, upon hearing the total of our McDonald’s order: wow. That’s a big number.
*****
Me: *increasingly testy, raising my voice to obtain answers to repeated questions as the boys talk over each other*
J, sincerely: Mom, do you need more sleep?
6 years old
***”*
Like I said. Totally under control.
I was attending C’s 9 month well check recently when the doctor asked me how the family was doing, throwing in the stock “4 boys… I don’t know how you do it” remark.
“I don’t know either,” I laughed, thinking longingly about my iced coffee waiting in the car.
“Do you think you’ll keep going? Or are you done?”
This question should not be vexing to my mental state. It comes up constantly, particularly when you seem to be on a steady once-every-other-year cadence of child production. For me, it’s often “will you keep going till you get a girl?” which irritates me for other reasons. But the fundamental curiosity — when are you going to stop expanding your family? — creates a quiet storm inside my head that rumbles around intermittently for the next few days that follow.
On the one hand, I answer “yes, we’re done.”
We have been in a state of endless accrual of stuff for the past 7 years. We have all the standard seasonal supplies (bikes, clothes, snow gear) to fit a boy at any stage of development up to 7 years old. We have diaper pads, baby baths, bouncers, swings, exersaucers, walkers, bottles, bibs, drying racks, sippies, plasticware, baby gates, drawer locks. With the exception of truly superfluous items or massive toy purges, we have effectively been unable to offload anything since J was born. We have a small boat of an SUV to accommodate our family size and the 4 x car seats, we have 2 boys sharing a room already, and we have a daycare bill that will equate to a significant raise in our monthly income when we get to stop paying it.
We are running a constant time deficit, and while we are more than comfortable letting standards slide with respect to things one might wish but not mandate (walk through the kitchen without coating one’s socks with a thin layer of Wheaties crumbs, for instance), we are already – with just one child in extracurricular activities – finding ourselves dividing children and tasks just to get things done.
For 7 years, we have not had a meal without cutting several people’s food into appropriately sized chunks such that they are not life-threatening choking hazards. We have not sat on our backyard patio without being spatially aware of where the youngest was and begging him to stop wandering into the street in search of the neighborhood playground. We have not left the house without a diaper bag or water bottles or snack packs or sunscreen or spare clothes. The mental management has left me so deeply resource challenged that I find myself making conscious determinations about things like “I need to be okay with a less-than-stellar performance review at work or I am going to burn out,” or “I will have to coast on the momentum of my relationships until I have time to be a good friend again,” or “I can only have fun once per week.”
And here’s the real talk: Dave and I had always talked about “3 with the option of 4,” and now we have 4 healthy, beautiful, boisterous boys. The notion of not pushing one’s luck comes to mind when considering not only another baby, but another pregnancy & VBAC delivery (at least, attempted by way of always delivering before someone would schedule you for an actual C-section) for me. And now, of course, of an age to be considered a geriatric mother!
I’m ready to move onto the next life stage. I’m ready to clear some shelf space, and worry less about a child accidentally putting himself in mortal peril by virtue of trying to eat a Lego, and for Pete’s sake put these 4 able bodied boys to work on some serious yard and home chores. I am busy. I am tired. But I am also so deeply, deeply happy.
So, yes, I say, “we’re done.” But I have yet to have that be a complete sentence. Rather, I am always compelled to offer additional context: “…but it’s still hard to say it out loud.”
There are a few reasons I believe I struggle with knowing I’m done.
The first is, simply, when you’ve created 4 wonderful children, with traits you recognize in yourself or your spouse but also some that are absolutely foreign, and you see them develop and change and become these little people that you are so privileged to know, it’s like you get the first read of the most extensive, exciting, page-turning novel and witness a story unfolding for the first time. How could you not want more of these people? It’s a slippery slope, I know, but to imagine not knowing C because we hadn’t gone for “the option of 4” is now a really sad contemplation. This train of thought falls apart quickly given the cost of pregnancy and birth to the mother (fun fact! The #1 cause of death for women ages 15 – 19 globally is childbirth!), but it still sparks a seed of greed in my brain… more of these lovely little monsters? Yes, please.
Then there’s the notion of “lasts” that would haunt me if I let them. I have become strangely emotional over bizarre “last first” milestones with C. Not just the obvious ones: the last first time he rolled over, or slept straight through the night, or moved from the bassinet into his own nursery… No, I’ve become highly attuned to the lesser known last firsts: the last first gummy smile before he cut a tooth, the last first stinky diaper after I added purees to his formerly exclusive breast milk diet, and the last first time he sat in the actual tub for his bath – and not only didn’t slip at all, but splashed so aggressively that his bath-mate, A, whined for maternal intervention.
Ultimately, and honestly, the root issue may be a result of the human’s frontal lobes being significantly newer than the limbic system. Maybe I am logically on board with being done for all the reasons above, but my animal instincts object & tell me to continue procreating. For better or worse, I do not live one of these unexamined lives that Socrates alluded to, so I am thrust into a state of contemplation when I detect this type of internal conflict.
Two comments that massively comfort me during those mental isolated thunderstorms:
- Dave said sincerely when I agonized about this one time: “you’ve physically and mentally given a lot of yourself to this for the past many years. It’s enough. It’s okay to turn the page and start the next chapter.”
- My mom told me, after I disclosed our considerations around – ahem – most effectively managing our family plan, and shared that I was concerned about doing anything “permanent” while I was still emotional about things: “then don’t do permanent. Take the temporary fix and come back to cross that bridge later.”
I guess it all comes down to this: motherhood is a paradox – especially in the weeds of the stage with young children. You are constantly busy, but simultaneously bored. You are lonely, but wish everyone would stop touching you so you could just have a moment to yourself. You are intensely terrified that you will make a mistake, but also feel more functional and capable and strong than you ever have in your life. I remember vividly the first day that I brought J home and watched him napping in his bassinet, with some version of clinical insomnia about to set in for me. I thought “what have I done?” and “this is so amazing; we should have done this sooner” in the very same breath.
It makes sense then, I suppose, that deciding that you are done can be equally paradoxical.
All this to say, we are done. But it is still hard to say it out loud.