Sunday, April 27, 2014

No Glasses and Non-Stop Lucy

Oh it's been the usual flurry of activity around here.

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First Scrabble game with my daughter. I have dreamed about this day.

Did I tell you we got a composter?
We got a composter. I am a crazy composter now. Did you know you can compost match sticks? Human hair? String? Well now you do. It feeds the crazy animal in me that hates wasting anything. I swear in my former life I must have been a child of the depression (right now Erin is reading this and thinking about the fact that I have been known to save and freeze a single strawberry--for smoothies).

The big kids and I enjoyed a rare outing of just the three of us last week, as we concluded spring break (which must be the biggest misnomer in the history of ever). We explored a new playground and can I just say that taking two big kids to the park is my new version of a spa day? So relaxing (comparatively speaking).

I also got a sitter this week so I could take Leo to the opthomologist (no glasses needed--I'm a little surprised but relieved). Leo, on the other hand was bummed, and so disappointed he actually followed the doctor into his office asking, "Where are my glasses?" (Peter Parker wears glasses, you know). In spite of the crushing news that he did not need his vision corrected, Leo was his usual amazing self at the doctor (not even fussing when his eyes were dilated). When I returned home one baby was napping peacefully (cough, cough, Harry).

One, was not.
Why nap when you can eat Mommy's takeout lunch treat (thank you, Chipotle gift card). And she didn't even know she liked guacamole.

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Lucy. Oh, Lucy. At some point you will read this and please know that I say this with all the love in my heart that when I put my head on my pillow at night, it's the not the waves I hear crashing (like after a day spent at the ocean)--it's the sound of your voice. The screeching, the squealing, the whining, and of course, yes, the laughter. It's you, with your unabashed loquaciousness, your 110 miles an hour way of being, it's your has-to-do-things-your-way-OR ELSE. It is your Force of Nature self, (yes, in all of its cliche glory, it fits you to a Capital T.)

But of course there is the flip side.
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I was SHOCKED that she sat for a full dental cleaning last week.

She can also be incredibly agreeable and helpful. She looooves to help. "You got it!" is her response to almost every chore type of request (she loves to retrieve the broom from the mudroom, for example, or clear her dishes from the table). Recently I asked Ellie to get me the iPad from upstairs and a few minutes later, down padded Lucy, "Here you go Mommy!" she said, her face, beaming with pride. There was Ellie, a few feet away looking sheepish: "Well, she's very responsible!" she offered.

The hours between 6pm-6:30pm continue to be the most trying (dinner is over, babies are winding down by winding up, or so it seems).
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Good thing I employ one of the best toddler yoga teachers around.

Bedtime does of course eventually come. Listening to Harry and Lucy chat in their cribs, as Lucy asks Harry "How old are you going to be on your birthday, Harry?" (We've been practicing this question with them for the upcoming big day). He replies, "Fwee!" And then she counts, "One, three, seben, nine, eleven, TWENTY!" 

And just like that, all the screeching and whining falls away. 
 





Monday, April 14, 2014

Summer Tease

Friday I felt downright victorious because we played outside without coats (poor Harry, such a creature of habit--he can't figure out what's going on when he doesn't need a coat--as soon as he hears "play outside" he runs to the mudroom, grabs his little navy blue down jacket off the hook and commands me, "Put my coat on!"). Lucy is no better--she insisted on wearing her Flipeez hat on today's neighborhood walk (high temperature: 79 degrees).




A rock, a trowel and a fairy skirt. She has a PLAN.

Then this weekend happened.


It was 82 degrees. Wait. WHAT?


Tomorrow it's supposed to rain. Not snow. So we're good.

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Thursday's List: Super Heroes, Captured Souls, the Energizer Bunny and Eiffel Tower(s) in New Jersey

1. Art and Photography:


Leo recently completed his best to date (in my humble opinion) family portrait. (Left to right): Mommy (Wonder Woman), Leo (Spider Man-OF COURSE), Lucy (Super Man), Harry (Bat Man), Ellie (The Flash Girl), Mama (Green Lantern) and flying high above is of course our dear, sweet, beloved Ruby the Super Dog.


Meanwhile Lucy mastered her very first face.

Ellie's first grade "spring portraits" came home. I never order these and consider them to be somewhat of a scam-- (I'm a traditionalist and normally just do fall).

But then then they had to go and CAPTURE HER SOUL. I mean, really.

2. Food:

The Nutella obsession continues. Every day, post-nap.

Is there anything better than Nutella? Well. No. And by the way, we are now the family that goes through three to four loaves of bread. A week. (Did I mention I finally realized in the midst of last Friday night's "pizza night" that we have officially graduated to needing two pizzas? Thanks Lucy who eats just the cheese off of three slices).

Speaking of Lucy and food, she and Harry have switched places when it comes to their eating habits. He used to be the "easy" voracious one, willing to try anything (Seasoned tofu! Dried seaweed!) and almost always cleaned his plate and asked for more. Now he pushes many of his former favorites away. You know what else is fun? Aside from macaroni and cheese, neither of them like to eat the same thing. Wait. Do Goldfish count?

This morning Lucy ate three pieces of toast and asked for more. Growth spurt? Perhaps. I mentioned this and Ellie piped up, "Maybe she's getting ready to hibernate! That would be relaxing for you, Mommy!"

3. Lucy:


Hello my name is Unadulterated Joy!

It's such a cliche but I have to use it. Lucy is the Energizer Bunny. She makes her presence known at all times, from the moment she awakes at 6:15, softly singing "Let It Go," (it quickly builds to an urgent, pressing crescendo of "MOMMYMOMMYGETMEOUTMOMMYMOMMY!"). Much of the time she is full volume, going 110 miles per hour while the rest of us are strolling along around at 25 (or if you're Harry it's closer to 15). She is insistent, demanding, unreasonably verbal and often hilarious. She does almost everything with a smile on her face, including pouring a cup of water on the floor or taking her pajamas off right before bedtime, making it difficult to get too angry with her, even if her behavior is ridiculous.



 The other day I overhead Harry and her playing together. She'd injured some body part and began pleading with Harry to "KISS IT! KISS IT! KISS IT!" That's when Harry piped up with "Relax."

I don't think any conversation in the history of conversations has better summarized the personality of two little people.

And yes, I MIGHT tell Lucy to Relax! oh, about 97 times a day.


I read something recently that said that said when you start to lose patience with your mind-numbingly impossible almost three year old (OK those were my words), you should look at their tiny feet, as a reminder that they aren't this small for very long. In short: Yes, I lose my patience every once in a while  And yes, I'm an incredible sap.

4. Harry:

Harry's speech continues to explode. He's starting to have little conversations (with himself and others) and it's SO nice that he's finally able to TELL us what he wants and needs and likes (no surprise there: Super Man, dump trucks, garbage trucks, police cars...) He repeats everything (See: "Relax!" and has picked up some adorable little expressions like "That was a close one!"



Harry and Lucy now mostly have free reign of the house. I've pretty much given up on keeping the upstairs gate closed because it never fails that right when I'm in the middle of making scrambled eggs, Harry decides he HAS TO HAVE HIS RACECAR, the one that's in his crib. Oh sure I could send a big kid up to open the gate but it's much easier to let them go up and down as they please. The same now goes for the basement playroom which is VERY EXCITING. Things can get a little too rambunctious sometimes when all four of them are down there but often during the day I send just the twins down while I make lunch or prep dinner. Invariably Lucy spends more time marching up and down the stairs to "Show me something" (Can you say Social Creature) but they still enjoy a bit of independence. As do I.


They love to "hide" in our bed. Or Ellie's. Or Leo's. And pretend to be "sleeping." Trust me they are SO not sleeping.

5. When the Past and the Present Come Crashing Together in a Beautiful and Heartbreaking Way:
A few days ago I drove into the city with the twins and as we sped along the New Jersey turnpike Harry kept pointing out the "Eiffel Tower" (also known as cell phone towers and verrrry tall utility-type towers? I guess?).  Poor kid. (By the way, he knows about the Eiffel Tower from books, "101 Dalmations" and a small Eiffel Tower pendant that I wear on a chain around my neck-he's not that well traveled yet).

Today on our way downstairs from nap, a photograph caught Harry's eye, it was one of my mom and me, almost fifteen years ago, standing in front of, yes, the Eiffel Tower. He'd never noticed it before but was immediately ecstatic and repeated "Eiffel Tower! Eiffel Tower!" over and over again. That's when I crouched down and pointed at my mom and said, "That's Grandma Eleanor. And that's Mommy." Again, Harry repeated. Lucy, standing just a step below Harry on the stairs, looked on with equal interest.


My mom and me, 1999. 

And then just like that the moment passed. Lucy took Harry's hand and said, "Come on Harry, I'll help you go downstairs." They proceeded to scoot down on their tushes as they are apt to do. But this time they were holding hands. Holding. Hands. "Here Harry, I'll help you," Lucy said.

And as I looked down at the backs of those two little heads, Lucy's a wild mess of untamed blonde curls and Harry's, a ruffled, chocolatey brown and growing out little boy haircut, that's when, just for a brief few seconds I felt so overcome with grief that it almost took my breathe away. I was once again reminded: She's missing this.

And then we had to get sweatshirts and shoes and a race car to hold and just the right My Little Pony to carry. It was time to pick Ellie up from school.

Sunday, March 30, 2014

Like a Lamb: Notes at the End of March



1. Last week we (well, a few of us, see above) played outside in the backyard WITHOUT COATS OR HATS. And it was just so dang exciting I almost couldn't stand it.


More evidence of children without hats. Please pay no mind to Harry's dirty face. The boy loves a good mud pie.

It's been a looooong winter folks. I know you've heard about this a few times. Even though it rained pretty much all weekend, it's pretty clear that spring is on da way. Friday on the way to picking Ellie up from school I saw the first little insistent purple crocuses of the season. In other words: Hope in a flower.



2. I've started cooking dinner again. Nothing fancy but a bit more complicated on weeknights than cereal or ordering Chinese takeout. And of course my children eat none of it and only eat, like four things between them (but none of the same four things). Anyway. I get a strange thrill from cooking with what's already in the pantry (for the grownups)--as well as trying new recipes. I forgot how much I love cooking.

 Last week I made:

Quinoa, zucchini and corn enchiladas

"Steak" quesadillas: (made with leftover cote de boeuf from a fancy dinner out--I assure you this is not exactly a usual staple at our house), sautéed red peppers, cilantro and cheddar cheese, served with homemade guacamole (I make mine with diced onions, fresh garlic, lime juice (I only had lemon but lime is better), cherry tomatoes and fresh cilantro.

Stir fry vegetables: (broccoli, carrots, zucchini, spinach), and capellini noodles, served with tofu and the peanut sauce from here (pictured above), topped with fresh cilantro.

Shells and vegetables: Sauteed vegetables (zucchini, cherry tomatoes, fresh spinach), Italian sausage and (pasta) shells with parmesan (OF COURSE). Served with a side of roasted Brussels sprouts (my absolute fave way to prepare them: drizzled with olive oil and parmesan cheese).

Quinoa, vegetables and Italian sausage: Sauteed zucchini (are you sensing a theme?), broccoli, fresh spinach, Italian sausage and tossed with quinoa. This was a little too much like the meal from the night before but I defrosted a bunch of sausage and had to cook it.

I haven't really started "meal planning." I basically just go to this fruit and vegetable market that is crazy cheap and sells crazy fresh produce and I buy a ton of different stuff and just throw things together. And I alternate every few weeks with groceries/dairy products/pantry staples/dry goods from Costco, Trader Joe's and Target.


Fresh herbs (basil) are also helpful.


A few weeks ago I made this two bean (white and kidney) chili with corn, cherry tomatoes and ground turkey. It made a great lunch for almost a whole week (for me--again, no children would eat--sigh). You know what I don't miss? Spending money on lunch!

3. More evidence we may have overdosed on "Frozen." On the way to picking Ellie up from school last week, Harry saw a man wearing a white sweatshirt and exclaimed, "OLAF!" (Yes, we OWN the dvd now--the kids actually gasped when I showed them the box). Then yesterday at a birthday party, "Let it Go" started playing and Leo actually had to stop eating his pizza, stand up and sing. And of course there were the requisite hand gestures and footwork.


Leo's "Frozen" world: (left to right) Anna, Elsa, Olaf, Sven and Kristoff


4. Lucy's favorite: When she wakes up before Harry (afternoon nap) and we sneak downstairs. I let her sit on the counter once while I made her a Nutella sandwich. Now she wants to do it every time.



Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Another Year, Settling In and a Thank You


Another birthday earlier this month and in my book, many small cakes trump one big cake. Happy birthday, indeed.

Thanks to everyone for their sweet comments to my last post. It's been heartening to hear from people and the support means so much. So thank you. Truly.

I absolutely HATE going this long between writing here but I will be honest. I haven't really known what to say. My mind is a jumble about everything that's transpired. Things seem fine and normal and things also feel completely upside down.

An email from an old high school friend who had also experienced a job loss summed it up best: He wrote to me of his layoff experience, of what it was like for him  to suddenly be without something that is the "anchor to our days." Which, yes. That. Exactly.


Don't get me wrong. I have plenty to keep me busy.

I think the toughest thing right now is that my life suddenly feels very small. Quite literally! Don't get me wrong--I love these small people, I'm just not accustomed to being with them all day every day. And I always thought I was a better mom when I had "my own thing" and requisite time away and that's always been work. But I also know that there is some grace in this and in a funny way I'm very lucky to have the chance to be doing what I'm doing right now. When we're driving in the minivan toward Costco (have I mentioned how amazing it is to grocery shop on the weekdays? No crowds and I don't have the rushed, urgent feeling because this is it! THIS is our big outing for the day!) and Lucy calls to me from the backseat "MOMMY! You need to talk! You're not saying anything," I can't help but smile.



And then they call to me to "Put on Frozen" and before I know it we're all three belting out "Let it Go" as we drive up Northfield Avenue and I look in the rear view mirror and see two sets of winter coat-covered arms gesticulating and conducting and of course hear their tiny unabashed voices: "Let it Gooooooo!"


I'm in the kitchen loading the dishwasher AGAIN and I realize the twins are suspiciously silent and I pad toward the front of the house and find them both sitting, almost tush to tush on the carpet in Leo's room, reading--Lucy, a Dr. Seuss and Harry a Lego instruction manual (because, of course).  I linger in the doorway much longer than I need to thinking, This is what I missed when I wasn't home with them. All the little, quiet moments. And so I'm enjoying them now. Or trying to. Because who knows how long they will last.



I mean, spending all day with twin two-year-olds, followed by everyone's favorite Witching Hour, aka, helping-Leo-with-his-homework-when-all-he-wants-to-do-is-play-Legos-or-watch TV, while the aforementioned twin two year olds pull at my leg or tug at my sweatshirt string or repeatedly ask for "More seltzer."  It is the best of times and it is the worst of times. Truly.



While it was unquestionably difficult working full-time and commuting into New York City every day, one of the things I enjoyed the most about it was the literal "change of scenery," not to mention the "break" that working afforded me (I've always said that going into the office was the easiest part of my day). The intellectual challenges were nice too, as were conversations with people over the age of nine.

The day, recently, that the boxes from my office were delivered to the house? That was a hard day. For years and years, that office in midtown Manhattan was my little oasis of calm. My shrine of sanity. And not only that, it was mine (well, it felt like mine anyway). The only thing that was truly separate from the kids, the house, it was just my little world, where I could be me, and an independent person.



But as another dear friend wrote to me recently, "Nothing is ever permanent, in the best possible way." That little time, that specific office and job title, is gone. It doesn't mean something like it won't be mine again, it just isn't, for now.

Three to five times a day, as I attempt to change the diaper of a toddler who is rigid and squirmy (yes it's possibly to be both) or as I am simultaneously trying to help Leo with math, bounce Harry on my knee, cut up oranges for Lucy and somehow convince Ellie that I am watching her draw ponies, I must think to myself (or mumble, between gritted teeth): This cannot be done. I cannot be home with these people for one more moment, get me to the nearest office. Stat. I will lick envelopes. I will sharpen pencils. Anything. 

In the morning after I drop Ellie at school and the twins and I are en route to some appointment or store, I sometimes pass the 8:55 a.m. express (I use that term loosely) bus to Port Authority. It was the bus that I took to work nearly every day. And part of me is relieved that I don't have to get on and brave another mind numbing commute and be apart from the kids for another nine hours and part of me feels a stinging, aching, longing. To just, go.

And then at least seven times a day, I think, I can totally do this. This is awesome. And not only that but I am rocking this being home thing. I'm making homemade chicken stock from bones! We never run out of homemade pumpkin bread (the twins' favorite). I'm replacing (well, picking them out at Home Depot) porch light fixtures we lost in one of the many blizzards. I'm helping the big kids with their homework (which, when it's good, it's very, very good and I think: I missed my calling! I should have been a teacher! And when it's bad: I'm back to pining for that envelope licking and the interminable bus commute). 


Whatever you do, don't tell Harry his "cymbals" are really pot lids.

The kids and I have wonderful, hilarious conversations (Ellie tells me on St. Patrick's Day that Lucy is "kind of  like a leprechaun. Because she's small and she gets whatever she wants.")  Leo, who has been anticipating the DVD release date of his beloved "Frozen" with complete reverence, announces that I "need to text his teacher" to tell her he won't be at school today--the release date--he'll be too busy watching "Frozen." (In case you're wondering, Leo did go to school).

We laugh. A lot. We dance to Pharrell's "Happy" in the kitchen on repeat (we did these things before of course, there is just more of it now--the days are, as they say long, but they really do go by quite quickly.)



So yes, there are good days and bad days. But really it's more good moments and bad moments.

Good thing I have these little people, for now, as the anchor to my days.


We're all adjusting to the new routine around here. And by "We" I really mean me. (Note Harry's expression: "I'd rather be napping.")

It never ceases to me amaze me how quickly the days at home pass by. Before I know it, it's 2:45 and I'm waking two babies up from naps to go fetch Ellie from school. Harry is usually the less pleased of the two. Nutella sandwiches eaten in the stroller on our six block walk help ease the pain. Running the stroller over speed bumps ("Like a roller coaster!" squeals Lucy) also helps. The sidewalks are just recently not completely snow and ice-covered and we can begin to find them again, can you believe it?

Yes, the snow is melting. Some days are warmer than others. We even braved an actual playground yesterday.



With the time change, evenings come later and we've been privy to some especially remarkable sunsets. These days I see them through our living room window, instead of on a bus stuck in traffic on the New Jersey Turnpike.



And life, as they say, well it does go on.











Monday, March 3, 2014

Doors and Windows: A New Chapter

And just like that, my job was eliminated.

It's difficult to put into words what it means to get up every day for almost twelve years and go to a place and then one morning be told, there is no place for you there anymore.

All it took was one solemn conversation. Tears. Disbelief. An office door closed and I was left with a new reality. Suddenly everything was different. "My" computer wasn't mine. Or "my" phone. I had a "last" day of work on a day I'd expected would be like any other. There were boxes to pack and a hundred phone calls to make.

Surreal doesn't begin to cover it.


I've already posted this, but it's just so perfect that I keep going back to it. I might edit it with "when something unexpected happens." Because I refuse to believe this is necessarily a bad thing. But unexpected? Oh. Yes.

I think I've certainly learned the lesson that life is full of surprises and that as much as we might like to think we have control of things, we really don't. All it takes is one extra chromosome, one hurricane wind-gust, one wonky cancer cell or one name on a list of lay-offs, to turn life as you know it, into something quite different.



The day I got the news (almost a month ago to the day, hence the quiet on my end) I left work early (obviously!) and did what any logical person would do. I got a mani/pedi. Then I walked the streets of our snowy, bitterly cold neighborhood (keep in mind these pictures were taken the day before snow storm #I'velosttrack).



It's funny how one big life event can make you look at everything with a different lens. These were the same streets I drove by and walked on every day. And yet. Everything seemed just...not the same.

Because it isn't.

For now I'm suddenly doing things like making chicken stock out of bones from a leftover roast chicken and discovering I can drop Ellie off in the morning in the front of her school, to thus avoid hauling twins through a parking lot when it's twelve degrees outside (to say nothing of negotiating Lucy in and out of her carseat twice--there's a good thirty minutes right there).



I'm not sure what my next act is. I am trying to be very When a Door Closes a Window Opens about all of this.



The best is yet to come? I think so. I really do.








Sunday, February 23, 2014

February Notes (So Far)

Yes, Harry. That's a lot of freaking snow.



Ellie, on Harry: "Mommy, I don't want Harry to grow up. He's too cute."

She may be a bit biased.


And Harry may have a slightly unorthodox approach to watercolors. Ahem.

It's been snow day, school day, snow day around here lately.

The kids even had school on President's Day, which is usually a school holiday. But we are evidently way out of snow days.


Somewhere in there, is our driveway.

But March is on the horizon and with it, spring will come. Or so I've heard.


Two weeks ago, I swear we woke up in Colorado.


Watching big sister build a snow man.


It is pretty.


"Mommy! I like eating!" Lucy announced the other day. I have NO idea where she gets that from.


Leo came home from school last week with music homework. He had to sing several verses from blues songs. He decided to illustrate his favorite (see above). Naturally it was "Hound Dog."


Ellie has introduced Lucy to the art of dress-up. These girls can entertain each other for a long while. Not going to lie. It's pretty awesome. And based on the garb and styling of these two, it probably comes as no surprise that the other day as Lucy (and Harry) and I strolled the aisles of our local Target, Lucy leaned over to me and said "Mommy, let's buy something fabulous!"