Tag Archives: Life

The Agony and the Ecstasy of Pre-K Soccer

We’re halfway through a cold and wet soccer season that included frigid temps and at least one flood. We finally had a sunny evening for a game on Thursday after yet another slushy thunderstorm delayed our usual Tuesday evening.

I have to say, pre-k soccer is a nearly religious experience for me in that it is so simple, so full-hearted, and so funny. I know “real” has lots of positions and rules and things called “cards” (?!) but pre-k soccer is a very pure sport. We focus on very reasonable things like: running the right way. Finding the right goal. Following the ball. There are only 8 kids on the field at a time, but 2 to 3 coaches (also refs), and dozens of teammates, parents, siblings, and other parks-and-rec-ers surrounding these little games on tiny squares of land. I can’t imagine the intensity of all that focus for a five year old. Which is why it makes sense that during every game there is at least one kid crying on the field for the whole game.

That kid is usually my kid. As I’ve mentioned before, Robin is an intense, sensitive child and scrutiny is painful for her at times. She hates learning new things, hates screwing up. She’s smart and a perfectionist and I love her for that. I also think it’s critical that she push through the discomfort to get to the rewarding stuff. She also needs friends in kindergarten. So there we were on sign up day. For the first two games, Robin consented to play for 3 minutes (total, out of 24) as long as I was reffing, and by “playing” she meant “allow my Mom to drag me by hand around the field and occasionally place me in front of the ball.” I told myself that while other kids’ parents might have the goal of getting their kids to score, getting their kids to run the right way, my goal for Robin was to be on the field without crying (1) and ideally, play without me holding her hand.

IMG_6678 IMG_6680 IMG_6682 IMG_6683

Robin isn’t the only crying kid by a long shot, which sorta helps. Just the other night, one of our regularly up for anything players was kind of spooked by a burly coach from the other team (he did nothing, he was simply a big dude) and so I ended up reffing the whole game, alternately dragging Robin around and Other Girl, too. Other Girl warmed up really fast, and actually ended up scoring a goal and saying, “I guess soccer really is fun!” Robin will NEVER admit that, but she loves the snacks after the game, and she’s making friends. That’s enough.

For me, soccer is spiritual and amazing. Towards the end, when the kids are punch drunk with fatigue, doing insane things, crashing into each other, throwing the ball backwards forwards and at each other’s faces, collapsing on the field dramatically just as the whistle blows, crying and laughing — it becomes an extraordinary human spectacle and it delights me completely. We say to them, go kick a ball in complete chaos for 25 minutes and they say OK, WE WILL ROCK THAT JOB FOR YOU. How much longer will they be willing to put themselves out there like this? How much longer will families and community turn out in droves to support them? It’s wonderful. I may have missed my calling. Although I bet pre-k coaching pays about as much as adjuncting.

Life’s What’s Happening!

I’m an auntie, y’all. My sister gave birth to the most beautiful, sweet baby boy two weeks ago and I spent last week visiting her and helping out. It was the longest I’ve ever been away from the girls and it went very well. B. handled solo parenthood like a pro, and I slept in until 8:30 two days in a row! Honestly, I thought it would be harder to be away but it was mostly wonderful. I was glad to come back, but I was glad to be by myself. More vacations for me in the future.

Next week is Kindergarten roundup for my oldest daughter, which is unreal and amazing to me. Holding my nephew, I was struck at how quickly his life will fly by. How I’ll turn around and he’ll be in a photo on the porch with an owl backpack and a lunchbag, just like my newborn baby, born in a wintry spring what seems like yesterday. He has dusky skin and brown hair, like the baby boy I fantasized I might have but never will. I love him like my own.

Here’s the thing about LIVING. I mean living as in, embracing life, staying busy, and connecting with people face to face. It takes time. It’s not that I don’t want to write. It’s not that I don’t have some deep insights to share, great moments I want to capture, or questions to ask you guys. It’s that with a full time job and children, I have to chose between LIFE and WRITING and right now LIFE is winning. I’m going to have to set aside writing time daily or weekly because I hate that I’m not getting stuff down on paper,  but I am having so much fun! I’m experimenting with voice-to-text for this reason. Maybe my morning commute will be a good chance? Sigh!!

I just want to point out what seems to be obvious, but here it is: I would never be having this much fun if I was in grad school right now. I wouldn’t be blogging. I wouldn’t be staying up late on school nights. I wouldn’t be watching Supernatural marathons with my sister and her snuggly baby (and cats, the poor neglected cats!). I would be stressing about jobs, stressing about summer money, stressing about the progress on a dissertation I wouldn’t be making, grading midterms, prepping for finals. I had no idea how much fun life could be as an adult, y’all.

What’s happening in your world? What are you excited about on the cusp of spring? What music are you listening to? What book is keeping you up at night?

Sure sign of Spring - Robin - Bird blmiers2 via Compfight

“To Get Better:” On Ravines, Ice, February, Driving Alone in Small Japanese Cars, and Not Getting Hurt

Yesterday, I slid off an icy road into a ravine. I was alone in the car, and unharmed. Nevertheless, it was a scary experience, and a scary deja vu: a reminder of a different accident I had on a different icy February day, in a different state, in a different time. Here’s a small piece I wrote about it at the literary kitchen writing workshop where Jen and I met last January.

30 Day Photo Challenge: My Reflection

30 Day Photo Challenge: My Reflection, Feb 2013

To get better, I had to forget.

I was eighteen: I’d had my driver’s license for barely a year, and I borrowed my
roommate’s Civic. It was February and I was terrified of highway driving, but I
headed north on I-35 convinced that if I blasted “Where The Streets Have No Name” loud enough, I could survive the drive and get home to my own bed and my Mom’s enchiladas. I was the worst kind of slow ass highway driver: I gritted my teeth and kept the odometer at five miles below the speed limit no matter which lane I was in. Merging, I was both timid and unpredictable, slowing to a near stop on the on ramp, then gunning it and shooting into the far lane with inches to spare. A boulder in a rushing stream, I forced the rush hour commuters to part behind me and then reconverge in a chaotic whirlpool ahead.

I wasn’t twenty miles into the journey when I hit a patch of ice beneath an overpass. I spun the wheel in panic, and before I had a grip, my car shot across the median. I saw a gap, a miraculous and generous space between clusters of cars, and I jammed the gas pedal so I’d speed through it. A second later, I was standing on the brakes to stop the car from plummeting into the ravine on the other side.

I got out of the car: it was fine and I was fine, except I wasn’t fine: my hands were shaking and my ears buzzed. When a man with my father’s name pulled over to check on me, I shouted my answers. He followed me as I pulled into a parking lot and made sure I had a cell phone and someone to call before he said goodbye. He said he had a daughter, too, and wow. If what had happened to me had happened to her.

I wouldn’t drive on the highway again. Even as a passenger, the slightest peripheral movement caused me to seize in fear, my eyes trained on the floor. I relied on friends and family to get me around; a high-strung hitchhiker, an ungrateful backseat driver. I began to feel resentful of my own entrapment and codependence.

So to get better, I had to forget.

I got up at 4 am. The highway was deserted but it was already warm and humid. I kept the windows down and the radio quiet. Driving is a dance, I said. They are your partners. They make room for you. Driving is a dance. Keep up. Driving is a dance.

Bow to your partner. I learned the steps and found the tempo. I forgot the chaos. I forgot the other cars, the ice. I forgot the feeling of floating, the rumble of concrete and metal beneath me. I forgot the fear. I forgot death.

Why I Blog, and Why More People Should Read Mama Nervosa

[Technically, Mama Nervosa celebrates a year of existence next month.]

A year ago I quit grad school, I quit drinking, and I started writing. I took a writing class and met Jen and said “you should blog with me” before I even knew her last name. I had no grand vision for this blog beyond having something written that was public. And writing about exactly what I wanted to write about, all the time, no exceptions. The opposite of grad school: my voice, topic choice, and a broad audience! Unfortunately, writing about whatever, whenever flies in the face of all conventional advice about how to cultivate a following for your blog. If we’d been really smart (or organized) we’d have been a Mommy blog. Or a lifestyle blog. Or a music blog. Or a quitta blog. And made our URL something like momswhoquitgradschoolandmarriedguyswithbeards.com

Photos count for NaBloPoMo, right?

JEN!

victoryrolls

ME!

That would have been wise, prudent, and potentially profitable! It just doesn’t seem to be how we roll around here. I’ve had blogger’s block lately. It’s not that I don’t have ideas — I have scads of them. I love writing about starting new projects, crazy changes on the homefront, music, video games, my past, and my future. I just keep getting bogged down in worries that it won’t make sense. That it’s too disjointed and random: the reader who found us because she likes reading our feminist take on kid’s shows might bail if I focus too much on work stuff. But my post-ac readers might be all YAWN when I start talking about weaning my daughters. About 50% of our traffic comes from random Google searches, and that doesn’t make or sustain a real audience. We’re not doing it right.

And I really want an audience! I’ve wanted an audience since I was a kid! I swear, if I could have been a blogger at age 7, I totally would have. I’ve always wanted to share my life. I remember when I discovered online journaling and was like OMG YES I WILL SHARE MY DIARY WITH STRANGERS! SIGN ME UP! I was born to blog. I have a deep confessional streak. I want people to read my stuff. So I would like to have a bigger audience.

But I can’t seem to break down my life into component parts to make that happen. My head says that we should streamline: theme it up, get some custom fucking graphics, have features and topics and some sense of coherence for goodness’ sake!! Then my heart says it wouldn’t be the whole story. Once I start thinking about things to leave out, it stops feeling like my (our) story, and it starts feeling like homework. I have thoughts, people! Insightful ones! Don’t preach to me about SEO!

I poked around for someone else to have encapsulated what it means to Be A Blogger in a way that resonates with me. I found a lot of “inspiration” and “chronicle my journey from x to y” and “Jesus” and “crafts” and “help people,” but this post at New York Cliche comes closest to how I feel:

I am aware that sometimes I walk on thin ice. I click the “Publish” button on my side bar, knowing full well I’m playing with fire. These texts are in my message history, “I wrote about you in my blog. Let me know if you hate it.” I look at the collection of stories I’ve told here, the comments I’ve received, the depth of my writing, how my style has evolved over the years, and I am proud… Why doesn’t the world know I wrote this? It’s good! Look at me, I’m clever! At the core… is the desire to write, not the desire to be read; no doubt this is obvious. I spend hours crafting each entry. I do it for myself, yes, but I send it out into the world hoping others get something out of my writing. I’m an artist by profession. I want to make my audience (that’s you!) think, I want to push the envelope. Affecting people is my passion. Even if the effect is discomfort…

Am I an artist? A writer? Those seem like such loaded words. I avoid saying them. They’re not even in my “about” page. I feel comfortable saying I’m a teacher because I’ve been paid to be a teacher. I even feel ok saying I’m an academic even though my qualifications are questionable! But WRITER sounds IMPORTANT and I don’t need another case of imposter syndrome after 8 years in grad school.

What is this weird genre of the blog? Why do I like it so much? Why am I here? Why so many words in all caps? Why did Jen get on this crazy train with me? What’s the point, if not sharing parenting tips, or making money or, I guess, working on a book deal? (I’m not ruling that out.) My big mouth + the internet has definitely = conflict in my life, but I keep being pulled back to this space and yapping about stuff I should keep private so everyone can see, including my Dad (maybe someday), my friends, my enemies, and my ex-boyfriends (all 3 of you!). Andrew Sullivan writes about exposed and vulnerable nature of blogging in this piece at The Atlantic:

No columnist or reporter or novelist will have his minute shifts or constant small contradictions exposed as mercilessly as a blogger’s are. A columnist can ignore or duck a subject less noticeably than a blogger committing thoughts to pixels several times a day. A reporter can wait—must wait—until every source has confirmed. A novelist can spend months or years before committing words to the world. For bloggers, the deadline is always now. Blogging is therefore to writing what extreme sports are to athletics: more free-form, more accident-prone, less formal, more alive. It is, in many ways, writing out loud.

Sullivan says that a blogger is less a Writer and more a conversation starter or dinner host:

The role of a blogger is not to defend against this but to embrace it. He is similar in this way to the host of a dinner party. He can provoke discussion or take a position, even passionately, but he also must create an atmosphere in which others want to participate. That atmosphere will inevitably be formed by the blogger’s personality. The blogosphere may, in fact, be the least veiled of any forum in which a writer dares to express himself. You can’t have blogger’s block. You have to express yourself now, while your emotions roil, while your temper flares, while your humor lasts. You can try to hide yourself from real scrutiny, and the exposure it demands, but it’s hard. And that’s what makes blogging as a form stand out: it is rich in personality. What endures is a human brand… It stems, I think, from the conversational style that blogging rewards. What you want in a conversationalist is as much character as authority. And if you think of blogging as more like talk radio or cable news than opinion magazines or daily newspapers, then this personalized emphasis is less surprising. People have a voice for radio and a face for television. For blogging, they have a sensibility.

I totally agree. I love our blog because it is full of personality, and I think we have a harmonious, honest, funny “sensibility.” Which makes me feel a little like this:

I just keep thinking, reader-friends, that Jen and I are neat and interesting people. I think our lives are only going to get more interesting. We have cool stories to tell you. We are funny and we have killer taste in music. We’re irreverent and nice and insightful. We are full of awesome. I think you should read us for those reasons, even if you aren’t a Mom, or a gardener, or an ex-academic, or a straight able-bodied cis-gendered white woman in her 30s, or broke, or a coffee drinker. I think more people should read us. We’re at least as interesting as this guy if not, ya know, exponentially better in every way. It’s going somewhere, we just don’t know where, but that’s not really the point of a blog: the ride is the point! I feel like if we start censoring the blog, leaving stuff out, focusing on “content” and “optimization,” then we might miss out on something in ourselves.  You’ll just have to trust us on this: something awesome will come from Mama Nervosa. Enjoy the ride. And tell your friends about us.

Lucky 2013

I never could have guessed, at this time last year, how completely different my life would look in 12 months.

On Dec 31st, 2011, I still believed I was going to comp in a few weeks. I believed that the best path forward was to finish a PhD and cross all appendages in the hope that the department I was teaching for would be able to hire me. I believed a diss was in my future. I was an adjunct.

Within 3 weeks, I quit grad school.

Within 6 weeks, I decided spur-of-the-moment to sign up for this writing workshop where I met this cool writer named Jen.

Within 8 weeks, Mama Nervosa was born.

Six months later, I had a new job, a new life.

There’s something about winter that works for me: I know a lot of people experience winter as this dark, doldrummy time (I mean, SAD is real) but for me winter is a productive time of change. My daughters were both born in winter, which makes this time of year feel sacred and special and anticipatory in a wonderful way (after all, we celebrate joyful milestones at 4 weeks and 8 weeks after Christmas!). I get into creative spurts, signing up for art or crochet classes and decorating rooms on a whim. I make big decisions.

2012 has been a monumental year for me. Pivotal, game changing. I learned so much about myself, much of it difficult. I came to grips with my depression and my many faults and weaknesses. It was intense, difficult, and full of great highs and great lows.

I expect 2013 to hold just as much growth, possibility, and novelty, but without as many deep channels of uncertainty and depression. I know I’m not out of the woods (is anyone, ever, really?) but trees are thinning out and the sky is light. Lucky 2013 is my expectation.

Happy New Year!

Starburst and Beach Grass On Turquoise free creative commonsCreative Commons License D. Sharon Pruitt via Compfight

 

Wordless Wednesday: It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas

On the hunt for the perfect tree.

In order to fully appreciate the cuteness here, you need to imagine Margeaux shouting “I COMING DADDY! IIIIIIIII COOOOOOMING!”

Perfect tree.

 

3 Things About Raising 3 Girls

1.) It’s not all tea parties. Yes, there are tea parties and princess dresses and My Little Ponies. There are also dinosaurs and robots made of legos and occasional wrestling matches and hair pulling. Today, D and Lucy defeated some sea snakes in the hallway by spraying large quantities of air freshener and then fleeing for the top bunk. Rather than saying no to gendered toys, we have tried to say yes to most things ( only a few things–Bratz, Alien Autopsy kits–have been ruled out entirely) and then encourage them to mix it up. It would not have occurred to me to put the My Little Pony skirts on the dinosaurs and stage an elaborate dino ballet, but they don’t hesitate to cross gender (and species) boundaries when they play.

2.) Having 3 is actually not that much more difficult than having 1. Because when you have 1, all you know is how to be a parent to 1 kid. And if you are anything like me, it is the most unbelievably overwhelming life-altering time suck you could ever imagine. I distinctly remember feeling that every minute of every day was overflowing with this new weird experience of parenting and sometimes that was joyful and sometimes we were all crying but there was no escaping, either way. I wrote about the intensity of those emotions earlier this spring. But once I had two, and three, I flexed. Time flexed. I parent differently. I’m less likely to read Busy Busy Pandas 100 times in a row and more likely to read it once and then say, “Now look at the pandas and make up your own story!” Or, “Go find your sister and ask her to make up a panda story with you!” Or, “Go roll around on the floor and pretend to be a panda!” Before Margeaux was born, I worried that D and Lucy would be jealous of the time I would need to devote to her. It only took a couple weeks to realize that in fact, they are so deeply enmeshed in their relationship to one another that if I left the fruit snacks and juice boxes within their reach, they might ignore me all day. And now that Margeaux is on the move, she tags along behind them and plays along to the best of her ability. Which brings me to:

3.) By the time you get to the third, safety standards seem like very flexible recommendations. When D was 1, if you had suggested that I let her go down the steps alone to jump on a trampoline with a 4 and 5 year old, I would have laughed out loud at your hilarious joke. Margeaux does this every day. In the morning, she sits on the couch with a toaster waffle and watches Ni Hao Kai Lan in her sleeper. She brushes her teeth. When I drop Lucy off at preschool, if I start chatting she’ll slip away and sneak into the classroom and sit down in a chair at one of the tables, like she’s totes ready for art center or play dough time. She can climb all the way up the ladder to the top bunk, though I try and prevent this since she and Lucy came crashing down in a sad, bruised pile last week. Today, though, I forgot to pull the ladder up because D slept in late, and when they fled the sea snakes Margeaux followed them up, lickity split, and they rolled around on the top bunk laughing and shrieking. When I reminded them that it’s not safe for Margeaux to be up so high D said, “But Mom! We were escaping the sea snakes! And sea snakes aren’t safe for babies either!” Can’t blame a girl for looking out for her baby sister.

Sisters are doin’ it for themselves.

 

 

Home on the Range

I’m scheduling some posts in advance while we travel to Oklahoma for a much-needed break.

For anyone new to our blog (thanks to Jen’s fearless NaBloPoMo-ing!), I wrote a series of posts this summer about my conflicted relationship with my home state, Oklahoma (A Tulsa Memoir). It’s been about 6 months since I made that exploratory trip, before I got my current job, when moving there seemed like more of an imminent possibility.

The election offers a nice study in contrasts between our home now (Iowa) and our home then (Oklahoma).

Iowa ultimately went for Obama, but it’s a fairly even mix of red and blue counties. And many, many Iowa counties were closely divided (49/49, or 51/48).

Every single county in Oklahoma went for Romney. Even in counties considered more diverse and liberal (Tulsa, Cleveland) went for Romney 2:1.

It’s not that conservatism is bad. It’s just such a monoculture down there. And Oklahoma seems to need to be dragged into the future kicking and screaming. It’s hard to imagine progress when it happens at a glacial pace. I very much admire activists who keep the fire burning when facing such immense obstacles.

As I wrote then, it’s hard to give up an amazing, progressive state for a state with horrible weather and a culture largely organized against everything we value and believe. But we love so many people there. And there are still days when I think, if the right job came along…

It could happen.

PS — There are two petitions for Oklahoma to secede from the union following Obama’s election.

Unnecessarily Deep Thoughts Inspired by Silent Hill (video game)

Warning: this entry contains spoilers for video games you will probably never play and likely don’t care about.

I’m writing to confess something so dorky I can’t quite believe I’m admitting to it publicly.

Lately, I’ve been watching video game walkthroughs on youtube.

I know, I know, this is possibly the only hobby geekier than actually playing video games. When I told this to Brian, he looked at me like I was nuts. It all started on a particularly slow day at work when I was reading Cracked articles in between planning appointments. It’s so easy to get sucked into a vortex of hilarity reading about The 5 Creepiest Urban Legends that are Actually True, or The 6 Scariest Places on Earth, and somehow I ended up reading article after article about scary video games and got curious about what they were actually like.

Found in NYC Neil Girling via Compfight

I found theRadBrad’s walkthrough channel on youtube and watched his let’s play of Silent Hill 2, which kept popping up as THE CREEPIEST HORROR GAME EVAR. And then I watched Silent Hill: Downpour. And then I watched some fucked up Indie games that kind of gave me nightmares, so I quit watching them. Now I’m watching Resident Evil 6, which is basically a “long rendered movie with some interactivity thrown in” as Cracked columnist David Wong opined. (Brad makes these fun because he’s not a perfect player, and he’s very funny, although sometimes his comments are off-color.)

I’m not really a gamer. Continue reading

Wordless Wednesday: Tiny Dancers

The cuteness was deafening. Or maybe it was the tap shoes. Hard to say, really.

Today was observation day in dance class. You can see the reflection of all the parents in folding chairs in the back of the studio. The girls started classes at this studio in early September, and parents haven’t been able to see or hear (other than the echo of the tap shoes) the classes yet, so today was exciting for all of us.

A rare moment of grace.

When they were doing these arabesques, all I could think of was that episode of Malcolm in the Middle, where Lois takes ballroom dancing lessons and in her mind she’s so elegant and amazing? In their minds, they are ballerinas.

That’s my girl.