Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Seven

Dear Jack,

In just a few short hours you will be seven.  Seven!  My heart!   These years of ours just fly.  You, my little man, with your simple presence in the world, have somehow managed to accelerate time.  You grow so fast, and life hurtles by so fast, I hardly have time to notice that we're all getting older.  But on this night, I remember.  And my only sadness is that I cannot find a way to stretch these years out, to make your childhood linger, to drink up this time with you.

Seven!

Who knew.

I wasn't ever going to have kids, you know.   At least, that's what I told myself in college.  I was too busy living my own life.  Gloriously free and searching madly for my purpose and I wasn't about to be tied down to something so mundane as motherhood.

I am so glad I changed my mind.

Certainly, my sweet, there are moments that are mundane, times I feel tied down. Most of them have to do with laundry and dishes.   And there were more than a few memorable moments of mommy-angst in your early years, my sweet one who did not like sleep schedules.

But there are also moments that are sublime.  Like tonight, watching you lean over the August-lush sidewalk gardens on Somerton, carefully, earnestly pollinating flowers with your finger.  Or like every time you reach out to hold my hand.  Like the golden-glow memories of the weight of you, 8 weeks old, curled on my chest and smelling of milk and softness, the feeling that those days would last forever.

But they didn't.  Because somehow, you are seven.  I blinked, and my baby was gone.

In his place-- this boy.  This lanky, broad shouldered boy, strong and tan, blonde-tipped hair brushing his forehead.  When I look at your back I can see the young man you will become.  But when I look at your eyes, your pursed-lip ornery smile, your dimple-- I see the echo of my baby in there still.  You are somewhere in between, trying to figure out who to be.

At seven, Jack, you are still, as ever, my sensitive and serious boy.  You set high expectations for yourself and disappointment hits you hard.  You are competitive and you love card games and board games-- as long as you win.  You have become quite a reader, tackling books well above grade level.  You like fantasy series and mysteries, and you'll read for an hour in a book you enjoy-- but you don't like to talk about the books you read.  You tell us to read it ourselves...  You love nature and animals and you want to be a pet shop owner when you grow up, sure and certain of this ambition as you have been for almost a year.  You love video games with a mad passion, with Dungeon Keeper and Minecraft being current favorites.  You've become a voracious eater, as long as the foods are on your preferred list-- mac n cheese, pepperoni sandwiches, chicken, carrots, chips and salsa.  You have a sweet tooth and you love saving and spending money.  You think hard about decisions.  You love to antagonize your sister.  You have the sweetest singing voice when you think no one is listening.

You are easily embarrassed these days, and sometimes you shrug off our hugs and affection in a heartbreaking foretaste of teenage years to come.  But then a moment later, you are launching yourself into an embrace, clinging to my waist, giggly and silly and just a little tiny boy again.

A great big little boy, that is.  You are almost to my shoulder and I can't carry you any more.  Imagine, my little baby that never let me put him down. Now you walk confidently ahead.  You have asked, now that you are seven, if you can ride your  bike around the corner without us.  I have said yes.

I feel like you are all grown up.

I am grateful that you're not.

I've got a few more years to keep working on slowing down time.  I'm going to try my best.  And at the very least I'm going to try to soak up all the moments of being of your mom.  It's so much better than I ever dreamed, and I'm so lucky.  I love you, Jackie-bear, now and always.

Sunday, August 24, 2014

Ninja Party

They've been sneaky ones, these seven years.  They flew right by with my hardly noticing and here I am, surprise! the mom of a second grader, an almost-seven-year-old ninja who is tall and strong and goofy and sensitive and smart, and who loves sound machines that make fart noises. 

He's a grand one. 

And we had a grand party to celebrate him.

Some ninja party numbers:

54 dragon napkins made into banners
48 tiny ninja figures for cupcakes and goody bags
72 pairs of Ninjago eyes
40 black and red balloons
48 cupcakes and countless sprinkles
4 extra helpers imported from upstate NY
30 felt headbands
1 homemade piƱata
9 hours of preparation
19 adults
22 children
2 hours of ninja madness in our yard
1 great party that was totally worth it all


The decorations:  before...

Drink table.  You can't see the eyes on the cups from here...

The ninja "staging area". We had a good number of little ninjas dressing up in front of the mirror.


Homemade napkin banners and ninja goody bags...


Surprise!  Sneaky ninja cake! (Ninjago eyes strike again!)



During!






Baby Indigo was a hit!  We don't have many tinies in our group any more...

Pinata time!




The sound machine! 

Playing tag the ninja-- in which we fooled the kids, getting them to carefully place tape where they thought the ninja was hiding... only to have the ninja be GONE upon reveal...  you should have seen how fast the kids dashed off to find the hidden ninja.  We only gave Jack a tiny hint so he could find it first.  :)  the kid needed a break as he'd be in tears at least two times before the party was over.  Luckily at this point its not a deal any more.  Everyone knows our boy-- and they love him anyway... 

 
The whole gang.  These are some spectacular children, with pretty great parents.  We are so lucky.
 Bonus prize:  Three days with Lulu and the triad!  They were a huge help with the party, instant friends for Jack and Ivy, and just wonderful to have around.  I liked our house all full of family...

 







Four days until my boy is officially seven.. four more days to ruminate on what that means to me.  For now-thank you to all who helped to make this a wonderful weekend for my wonderful son.
 

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Happy Ending

Off to work tomorrow.  I can't believe that the end of summer has arrived.  I am not in any way ready to start school-- it just feels too soon!  I want another week...another week of sleeping in, another week to soak up the city in the summer, to fit in all the things that we haven't had time to do.  Another week to work on the house, to get any project at all done around here.  Another week of NOT having to deal with all of the headaches it seems that this year is going to offer.

Sigh.

End of whining.

In the face of summer's end, we grabbed on to the season with both hands and took all we could get.

A quick recap:  Wednesday I managed to sneak in two glorious hours at WOW with my little family in between tutoring and a WSC board meeting..Thursday night brought a sleepover for the kids with their wonderful Aunt Bec (complete with Kiddie Park, EZ-Bake ovens and fishing) and a night out downtown for Nat and I, enjoying the sights and sounds of the Games (complete with drag queens, tons of swag, and margaritas on East Fourth).  Friday:  a trip to Fairport Harbor with friends and then, our first night of camping as a family, at the Squire's Castle family campout.  Saturday, a quick bit of beach time, Becca's housewarming party, and a playdate with more friends.  Today:  Canine Fun Days and more time at the beach.

Oh, and time for a long run, sleeping in, and reading the paper.

Summer is so great.  This is why I want more...

Wednesday:

Remember when we propped our little babies inside this statue?



They had this really cool temporary sculpture up.  It was so cool.  So many people posing for pictures, celebrating our city..





Thursday:  Nat and I, enjoying our city some more.  I want the Gay Games to stay in Cleveland forever!  We look good in rainbows...







Friday:  Fairport Harbor.  The water quality rating was poor, so we didn't swim.  Well, except for Corydon. And Max and Jack pretended to swim in the sand.  Which was pretty hilarious.




Friday Night!  Our first camping trip!  Which was barely a camping trip and still somehow the entire fan was full of stuff.  Camping is silly.  But there is just something about waking up to the chilly morning, standing around outside waiting for the sun, about staying up til full dark and snuggling in to a tent...   This particular camping trip was a bit different than we might have chosen on our own, but it was easy, with breakfast provided as well as the chance to make a lot of new friends (all the other families were SO nice, and I even ran into another Hiram Alum and a friend from High School).  Next time, though, we want our own fire pit at our campsite!

The kids did great, sleeping soundly through the night, and they appeared to have a great time.

Except in this picture, where the girls are pretending to be princesses waiting to be rescued.  The castle was totally awesome, by the way, especially in the dark on Friday night.


Making friends on the slackline.







Saturday:  Not many pictures.  We were tired.  But we did have a great evening hosting these two boys...


Today:  Hundreds of good dogs wandering the polo fields.  Kind of tired, hungry, rangy kids being dragged amongst them.  A juxtaposition between awesome and a pain in the ***.  Of course I am glad we went.  I wouldn't miss it.  But I wish it wasn't the last day of vacation because I think that put a damper on the day for me...



Still, though, this weekend was a happy ending to a very satisfactory summer.  

I'll miss you, vacation.  You were grand.