Motherhood and family
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Photographer
Alba: “Can I take pictures with your phone?”
Me: “No, but you can use my good camera instead. You just have to promise me you’ll be really careful.”
Alba: “Ok, I’ll be super careful.”Alba then wanders around the house on her own for the first time ever with my Canon EOS 70D after receiving a one-minute lesson on how it works. The following is a selection of her art work. At the end she said, “I am a photographer. That’s what it’s called when you take really good pictures”.








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Just a broken group of idiots
The following is another guest post by someone who is way too funny and shall also remain nameless.

I was at grandparents lake house for Thanksgiving. My aunt and her two small children came. The lake house is owned by my mom’s dad and the aunt that came is my dad’s sister. She is mad at her sis/ma so she came with us to the lake. This is very confusing to read probably because there is sooo much of the story I am leaving out.
That aunt brought her spawn to Dave’s house and came with my little fam to the Nike XC race. I hurt myself on a swing trying to make a music video. There is a video btw. I ran away from people and said bomb. I realized that was bad but the real reason I said that was not any better than what you think. Matty G. is beautiful. My mom lacks DJ skills. Brain no brain.
Went to NYC and went to wrong place. Took one hour to drive two miles. Big bro lacks map skills. Secret burger joint thinks we are VIPs. We aren’t. Just a broken group of idiots. Burger good. Aunt disappeared with mystery man. I bought a small ball after getting attacked by a man. He took my balls. Needed to pee so went to sleep with small headed giants. Morning bagels. Went Subway, fire on meatball. Went to work and got wet. Slept again. I am here.
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Ten and five
R and A, you save me. You move me. You keep me afloat. You make mundane days into my favorite moments. You’re ten and five. I cry as I write your ages for you’ll never be these again. I want to keep you as you are: wrapped in wonder and joy and so much contagious spunkiness.
It’s just another weekend with no real plans, but it’s my weekend and since we’re together the days unfold as if they were made for us.
Surrounded on all sides by kids and parents on iPads and phones, Rafe and I dare to read a hardcover library book of scary ghost stories for kids while Alba learns, for the first time, to move from one gymnastic ring to the next. I am faster than Rafe at reading so while I wait for him to turn the page I look up just in time to witness her grow more confident and strong right before my eyes.
We return home and they both just want to play with me at the same time, per usual. I come up with the perfect plan to keep them both happy. I stand in the middle of my living room, Rafe guarding his goal on one side and Alba on the other net. I alternate and try to score on both of these couch goalies. We do this for 30 minutes until lunch. They are disappointed and mad when the game ends.
We recover while eating sun butter and fluff sandwiches while watching Bluey, stopping only to laugh together.
Rafe’s friend comes over right after we finish eating. He immediately asks if I can play Taylor Swift. My house becomes a dance party. This friend knows every line to every song. While he may not be aware, Rafe’s being turned into a Swiftie. If you ask him he’ll say he only likes rap, but we know the truth.
The dance party turns into board games and pig piles and jumping on the trampoline full of fall leaves.
Alba’s a bad loser. When she doesn’t win the game we take a photo of us all being angry and then I turn us into emojis.
The exact moment when the parents arrive at my house to pick up Rafe’s friend, I have two boys staring at me with the biggest “please” faces and prayer hands asking for a sleepover. I can’t say no. Also, I didn’t buy the coolest teal pullout couch for nothing.
Alas, the fun was about to stop but it continues. We get take-out. The boys watch Matilda while I get Alba ready for bed. I happen to walk by and hear “When I grow up” and stop myself from bursting into tears.
The line from the song about adults being brave enough to fight the monsters under the bed gets me every time.
I don’t want them to grow up. Not yet. Can’t we just wait a little longer at these ages?
I’m not yet uncool. I know it’s coming but we’re not there. The kids and their friends want me to hang out and play and sing and dance. This will change. It’s just around the corner.
For now this insomniac is awake. The beautiful children are sleeping for they don’t yet know of adult problems. I won’t tell them what’s surely ahead. I’d selfishly like them to stay this innocent and free forever.
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M is for matriarchy
M is for matriarchy*
The antidote to patriarchy.M is for mama.
The gentle ruler of our magical kingdom.M is for moments of peace.
We’ve been waiting too long for this day.M is for messes.
We eat on the carpet. We spill food on our clothes. No one says a word.M is for music.
We take breaks from mealtimes to dance. It’s Nancy our neighbor with her accordion. It’s the sound of crickets at night when my screen door is open.
M is for magic.
You tell me you’re braver when I hold your hand. It fills my day with hope.M is for marriage.
I believed it was my one true path to happiness. What a mirage.M is for mixed emotions.
I cry and laugh everyday.M is for memoir, five years in the making.
M is for moving on.
It’s hard work, but now I see the path before me that was hidden.
*Shout out to D for inspiring me to write this blog post. -
An urgent case for stardust
You don’t have to be jealous of me.
You just have to be better.Tune in. Slow down. Enter their worlds full of magic and let their stardust fill you up.
The less you can be an adult with them the better. Make a fart joke. Dance. Watch their faces carefully when they find magic in something we’d consider mundane. Laugh at her jokes. Bask in his wisdom.


When they are fighting or crossing a line, ask yourself why. Don’t assume they are flawed. Assume they are tired or hungry or sad or angry.
They won’t remember all details of our divorce. They will instinctively remember the feelings when they are 27, 45, and 80. The emotions will catch them off guard and throw them on a high speed train right back to 10 and 5.
Find the patience even if you’re faking it at first. Sometimes I fake it too, but it always blurs a line and I find the real and true actual joy deep down. Every single time.
When you are tired, ask for help. I’m here. Your family is too. They’d catch a plane in a heartbeat for you.
The truth is that they will carry this unstable time in their bones forever. Make sure you stabilize yourself now.
Start immediately.
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Pure joy
My marriage is in a slow and excruciating path to hell.
I am in one of the lowest places of my life.
Yesterday I drove to New Hampshire to have a sleep over with my family. I need lots of breaks from my own house, a home currently dripping with negativity.
When I arrive I am greeted by two homes. One is an in-law apartment where my parents live and the other is my brother and sister-in-law’s home.
I never know which one to go into first so I often wait and see who opens their interior door first. Yesterday it was my mom. She’s peaceful. She is a very good listener. She feeds me a banana, makes me green tea and tells me to relax while she makes me dinner. I am hungry and finally eat a full meal with her by my side. She says she’s trying to fatten me up.
After dinner I join my brother, sister in law and my two nephews. I interrupt their watching of Kung Fu Panda with the chaos that lives in me. They all listen to me and are really with me around the kitchen table while I begin to cry over my divorce.
My nephews listen to me too. And, it’s hard for me to know that they know about the divorce. It makes it more real somehow.
And yet, instinctively they kick into high gear and know exactly what I need in this moment.
They begin sharing with me all of the wierdest and most hilarious photos they’ve taken of their own faces. I quickly realize this is something they do all the time. I feel their could be hundreds. Their phones are full of awkward photos they’ve taken of themselves. And why do they do it? It’s not for social media. It is simply to make themselves and others laugh their asses off. To me, it is an act of resistance against the idea of perfectionism. They are brilliant.


What happens to me for the next 30 minutes is what I now know is actual joy, a feeling I’ve avoided for years thinking I don’t deserve to feel it. As they show me these pictures my face begins to ache. It’s one of the funniest things I’ve ever experience in my life. I ask them to please always and forever text me whenever they take one.
A part of grieving for me has to be humor because I really did feel at peace after this intense laughter session.
Thanks, J and N. You’ve helped me more than you’ll ever know.
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Almost Grinch
My heart is not three sizes too small
But three sizes too big
You wouldn’t be able to tell, though, because I have dreams about ruining Christmas
Before Christmas I do think about stealing all of the presents worldwide to see what would really happen on Christmas day
How would Christmas day shift, how would the lead up to Christmas change if we weren’t seeking and giving trinkets to our most cherished family and friends?
How could the gradual slow down, grinding to a peaceful halt, give us more space to focus on each other?
I would trade your gift for a heartfelt walk or a cup of coffee any day of the week
That’s not to say that I do not appreciate your time and effort in thinking about me, but I also know that time and effort is mixed up in a giant snow globe of holiday stress
I’d like to take that off your plate, and, guess what, you don’t even have to hang with me, if you don’t want to
For the first time in my life this week, I baked bread and sent it overnight in a red bubble wrapped box
I showed up at the post office and was the person buying bubble wrap, tape and boxes on the floor figuring it all out like an unprepared teenager before a big presentation
When it was finally together, I paid for all the things and turned around to find another woman sitting on the floor, in the same, exact predicament.
I looked at her and handed her the tape and bubble wrap
She smiled at me behind her mask, I saw it in the crinkle of her eyes
And I was reminded of the true Christmas spirit, what I am yearning for this time of year
Giving one another what we really need: Kindness, generosity, love
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Be kind and stand up
Tonight at bedtime you looked at me sweetly with your perfect face and asked me if I could stay for a minute longer.
Sometimes I’m so tired that I say I can’t because I just want to make it to the couch without answering one more question.
But tonight, you asked. And I stayed.
You finally had me alone, your mama, without little sister wailing or vying for my attention, to be fully present. You took the opportunity to bravely share what’s not kind in your world, what you’re experiencing, and what perplexes you.
While you speak I’m reminded and honored that you trust me enough to share your feelings. And I want you to know that I don’t take that lightly.
I listen deeply and hear you, and what you need to know about me is that I’ll always show up for you. You were born wise and deeply kind, and are completely and so genuinely shocked with people you meet in the world who would not choose to exude kindness at every moment.
How can I tell you that it’s not you who needs to change? How do I explain that people are complex and come with their own uncontrollable baggage?
What I’ve never needed to tell you is to continue to be kind when others aren’t. You just show up that way. Every day.
I can’t change the world around you, but I’m starting to give you the tools to bravely move through it. I want you to know this: You can be kind and stand up for yourself.
No one ever taught me that, but since I’m practicing this myself, will you practice right along with me?
And, I promise I’ll be better at staying “just a minute longer”.
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Poseidon’s rage
One day when you are both teenagers I think I’ll miss the days when I could break you out of a bad mood in no time at all. Your moods change as often as waves upon the sand. One moment we’re living the perfect beach day and the next you are embodying Poseidon’s unpredictable rage upon our home.
And when what happens, I can swoop you up into my arms while all hell is breaking loose at dinner and twirl you around to Let it go until you forget that you were screaming ferociously seconds ago at the offensive chicken on your plate.

What will happen when our go-to fart jokes are no longer funny? The joy of an 8 year old laughing harder than I’ve ever seen in my life when we call him out for letting one rip is irreplaceable. And when you sulk because you’re bored, a simple hair mustache makes it all disappear.
You’ll change one day. And we’ll adapt with more refined tools, twirls replaced with walks and fart jokes switched out for late night talks. And, when it comes, I vow to always try to help you and never make you feel like having emotions means you are unstable or that something is wrong with you. I’ll sit with you in any emotion, just like your incredibly wise papá does for me, every day. -
Like fireflies

And while I write they spin around me like fireflies lighting up the darkness that surrounds me. Each word on the page pulls me further and closer to you, sister, and I break back into reality for a quick second when she approaches me with a book to read or he drops another bucket into his basketball hoop and the vibration shakes me back here and now.
They are dreamlike in appearance and fill me with joy when they enter my atmosphere. I know them as little creatures who will be small for this tiny window of time before they grow up and away and use their light to brighten up the entire world.
But for this brief moment of time, they are mine and selfishly I keep them close to shield me from the storm that erupts on the page when I think of what happened to you.