Letting Go

What (or whom) did you let go of this year? Why?

OK first, I am bad at letting go. I hold people and grudges and inanimate objects and clothes. I might need it someday. I didn’t need it last year but I might need it tomorrow. Wouldn’t it be a shame if I needed it tomorrow and it was gone?

Sure, I could get another. Friend, pair of pants, perfect index card. But I already have this one.

After some reflection, I see that I have let go of caring what people think of me. A little. Not a lot. It is ongoing, this process. In the words of Faith No More, I CARE A LOT.

This year, I planned the preschool Christmas party. I was nervous about the responsibility; you know how people are, they gossip and talk shit about other people. I had to book a venue, organize food, put together a slew of goody bags, all on a budget. Two years ago, the goody bags were too expensive. Last year, they were too cheap. Everyone had a story about the year the Christmas party sucked. I had a binder full of useless information. It was all a lot more than I’d bargained for when I agreed to buy a couple of fruit trays and print out a flyer for the classroom. It is always more than you’ve bargained for.

When I take stuff on, I really take it on. I care. I don’t *want* to care as much as I do, but I do. I care what people think. Sometimes that’s why I refuse to take stuff on, because I’m worried I’ll care too much and get stressed out.

Then one day I realized; I will never see most of these people again. My kid is in the older class, he is going to a different elementary school than all the other kids, these parents are not My People. I need not fear being judged. I need only do my job to the best of my ability.

So I did. It went fine. It’s over. It’s possible they will be gossiping about how the goody bags were ambigenderous. I don’t care, in the “oh god how can I show my face again” sort of way. I care that the kids had fun, I care that no one bled, I care that it’s done and I did my best.

It’s like the moment I had a few years back when I was working for the software company. I was putting together a sales presentation and it was all fiddly and had fifteen sets of tabs and eighteen colour prints per binder and there were six binders – oh! maybe there need to be a couple of extra binders! – and the boss was nervous and we were all nervous because he was nervous (and more than a bit volatile) and suddenly I thought: Is anyone going to DIE if I don’t do this binder right? Seriously. Is anyone going to DIE.

The answer, of course, was no.

I think about that a lot when I get too wrapped up in things that really don’t matter. I mean, they matter a bit, everything does, but really? Is it worth tying yourself in knots about? It’s an obligation. It’s a job. No one is going to die.

Good thing I’m not a surgeon, hey?

I have let go of caring too much about things that don’t matter. I am reserving my care for the things that do matter.

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ControverSunday: Happy Holidays

The first Sunday of each month is ControverSunday! Check out the list of people participating at Kathleen’s place – and thanks, Kathleen, for reminding us.

badges

I come from a Christian background. A middle of the road, not too fundamental, not too progressive, Baptist Christian background. Some members of my family have taken the road to High and Mightiness. Others have taken the low road to a more moderate embrace of the Lord and his teachings. I, for one, am not too interested in organized religion, though I do believe the same things Mr. Jesus Christ did: that we should treat the lowest with the same respect as we do the highest, that we should forgive and be forgiven.

So, it’s Mr. Jesus Christ’s birthday at some point this month. I am not going to talk about Jesus because I don’t know much more than the preceding few paragraphs.

I am lucky, in that I am married to someone who comes from a similar background. His Christian religious subset (genus? phyllus?) is Anglican. So there are more robes in his past but that’s about the only difference.

(feel free to correct me, anyone in the world who is shocked and offended by my cavalier descriptions of organized religion)

It is especially handy that we are on the same page about religion now that we have kids, because when Special holidays come around, we don’t have to argue about how to celebrate them, which can make up a lot of people’s holiday stress.

Because really, holiday traditions are very personal. They are the things you remember from your childhood, they’re entwined with flavours and smells and excitement and sometimes trauma. Pulling out the little china Christmas tree that used to be my grandmother’s reminds me of every single time I have seen that little china Christmas tree on a shelf, right back to when my grandmother lived in my parents’ basement when I was a 6 year old.

And it can be very difficult to reconcile another human being’s total failure to understand that gifts from Santa must be appropriately labeled, which, so far, is the only real “discussion” SA and I have had about Christmas. I think.

Things that have come to mean Christmas at our house:

Lights.

I need lights. Here is a great post about holiday lights. I think of it every year when I light candles and plug in the string of lights outside. This year, because it was so dark and horrible that weekend, I put up our outside lights the weekend after Remembrance Day. And since Fresco was a baby we have gone out for walks between 4 – 6 pm before SA gets home, so that the kids can see the houses with lights and all the animatronic reindeer on peoples’ lawns. The dark and cold calms them and the sight of houses bedecked with lights makes them squeal and run down the street.

Christmas Elmo, as ridiculous as he is, means Christmas to the children. When he comes out of the mysterious box in my mysterious closet in my mysterious bedroom, it is ON.

Santa

This is the first year anyone in the house has really believed in Santa. Last year there was some interest, mainly because Santa came to Trombone’s preschool Christmas party and gave him a candycane and a pencil (he remembers the pencil very clearly) but we don’t line up in the mall to see Santa and we don’t pay $85,000 for a picture with Santa. Good thing, too; the other night at this year’s preschool Christmas party both boys sat on Santa’s knee and the photos of that look like maybe the children are walking the wrong way down a busy freeway.

Now that they “believe” in Santa, I realize what a rip off it is. I have to buy two presents – one from Santa and one from me. And I have to let Santa top me because he’s Santa. I have to basically declare myself inferior to someone who is fictional! And then, in a few years, he will be proven fictional and will my children remember that Santa = best gift ever = mommy = best person ever? No, they will not. Harumph.

Like so many other aspects of my parenting – getting Trombone hooked on the expensive kind of Parmesan cheese, for example – I didn’t think this through.

And I get the arguments against Santa – creepy dude coming in your house much? Touching your things? Don’t talk to strangers and don’t forget to lock the door when you go out, but if he’s in a red suit saying HO HO HO it’s all good?

Also we have a gas fireplace and this is MESSING TROMBONE UP.

I also get the arguments for Santa – fantasy life is important. Excitement is important. Collective imagination – being in on the same in-joke as everyone else your age – is important.

So we come down in the middle. We don’t overdo Santa. We don’t use Santa as a threat because I think that’s all kinds of wrong. But we act excited when we see him. And we talk about whether or not he will actually bring a medium sized drum kit down our non-existent chimney or whether he might bring something else.

Tree!

Thankfully, SA and I also agree that a real tree is the best tree. We had a tree the year Trombone was 18 months old. He was the kind of 18 month old who stood in awe of the tree and never touched it. I am totally serious. The next year, we had Fresco, who had just learned to crawl and pull himself up on things, so no tree. Last year, Fresco was almost 2 and already kind of a poor listener. No tree. This year, TREE. The smell of tree, the prickly needles, the sap on your hands, the way it sits in the corner of the room and waits for you to switch its lights on and make the room glow, the little “ahhh” I feel every time I see a tree sparkling with lights and laden with ornaments; I don’t want to consider any alternate arguments, I love real trees, the end.

My approach to the holidays, like my approach to the rest of my life, is not child-centered. There is more at stake than my child’s experience of Christmas; there is also my own, continued experience of Christmas to consider. And so, I continue to ignore everything that offends me (like the Mall, the commercials, the other parents at preschool) and focus on the things I like about this time of year. The shortbread, the goodwill, the little oranges, the new socks without holes in the heels. Hint. Hint.

I love the process of, year after year, building our own traditions and making our own memories. It really, more than a lot of other things we do together, feels like family to me.

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Wonderful

How two beautiful, intelligent, hilarious, curious, loving people who exist as individuals on this earth came out of my body when all it does most days is pee.

The miracle of the first cup of coffee of the day.

Starting to write a short story blind – with no idea how it will turn out – and having it turn into a story.

My intuition.

My kids’ imaginations.

***

I am flummoxed by today’s reverb10 prompt, written by Jeffrey Davis: How did you cultivate a sense of wonder in your life this year?

I could list more things that fill me with wonder, (the word “flummox,”) but I have been doing the five-a-day Grace In Small Things for 327 entries now, so it would be stealing from there. On the other hand, having recorded 1,500 + Small Things that are Graceful is probably something that contributes to my cultivation of wonder.

But I’ve thought about it all day and I don’t think I do cultivate wonder, in the sense that means look after, or help grow, or keep alive. I don’t do anything but keep my eyes and ears open and collect.

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This Moment Brought To You By Ducks

#reverb10 (via Ali Edwards) says:

Pick one moment during which you felt most alive this year. Describe it in vivid detail (texture, smells, voices, noises, colors)

On a Sunday morning in early November, a few days after Saint Aardvark left for his conference and a week before he was to return, I decided to take the kids on an adventure. I did some internet browsing and thanks to my pal Kim at Milkybeer and her comprehensive guide to stroller / child friendly walks in the lower mainland, decided to head to the Reifel Migratory Bird Sanctuary in Ladner.

The kids and I piled into the car and Fresco fell asleep (it was time-change day so he’d been up since five past ridiculous). We drove and drove and took several highways and followed google maps’ for once excellent directions and eventually we arrived; way out beyond berry country, across a one-lane bridge, past the pumpkin patch and almost in the ocean. We paid admission and bought a bag of bird seed and started walking toward a crowd of fat ducks, all clucking and feathers aflap.

The sun was brilliant and the sky was blue and the air held just a hint of cold. Our noses pinked and we stuffed our hands in our pockets and strolled among the ducks and past the tourists and got out of the way of the serious birdwatchers who hauled tripods and had enormous cameras slung over their shoulders.

There were a lot of people there that day; it was a perfect day to watch birds and walk around in the sunshine, but it felt like we were alone on our own island of tall grass and thick bushes. After a while, we went down an arterial path and sat on a bench in the sun, overlooking a pond full of ducks. I pulled out the cheese and crackers and apple I had packed for a snack and the boys dug in. After a few minutes, the ducks realized we weren’t going to feed them, so they carried on doing their duck thing; diving for things and squabbling and playing tag. Trombone and Fresco watched, quietly, shoving their mouths full of food and occasionally laughing when the black and white duck dove and shook his wet tail feathers in the air.

The splash of water and the far-off call of geese, the occasional rustle of a chickadee moving from branch to branch, the quiet of children and animals co-existing, the damp bench under my thighs, the sun warming my forehead. Fresco in his blue fleecy jacket, Trombone in his knitted chicken hat, twin pairs of rubber boots swinging next to me. Crackers crunching and ducks paddling. The smell of wet swamp and thick fern, and beyond that, the tang of sea.

There was so much beautiful quiet in that moment, but beyond quiet, there was peace. I drank it in. It felt like tea that was just the right temperature. Balm on a burn. The hairs on my arms prickled with anticipation and the world felt clear and graspable. I felt like I could pluck happiness right out of that cold, blue sky.

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Day Two: Writing Out of My Head

December 2 Writing.
What do you do each day that doesn’t contribute to your writing — and can you eliminate it?

First the funny responses: look after my children. Surf the Internet. Read other peoples’ writing.

But of course those things do contribute to my writing.

Writing is three things: collecting. Thinking. And expressing.

(It’s like a digestive system!)

My daily life contributes to the collecting. I pay attention. That is second nature.

The expressing is easy. I can type. I can write. I have paper, pens, laptop, desk, time if I make it, for expressing. It’s physical. I might not like the results right away but I know I can edit, I know I can salvage.

(Everybody poops!)

I have taken extra pains to not think while I write, to trust my brain to let everything out if I put a pen in my hand or a keyboard under my fingers.

But the thinking. The middle part. The digestion. The transformation of nutrition to product. Eat, sleep, poop. It’s what babies do. Mine eat and poop fine, but the sleep is the issue. For me, the middle step is the issue too. Why?

BRAIN.

MY BRAIN.

IT NEVER STOPS.

I need quiet in my head. To process things, get them ready for writing down.

My head is a highway. There are always cars humming by, I don’t always notice what colour they are, they just buzz and hum and go and stuff and whee. Most of it, not useful. Most of it, cars I don’t care about. Most of it, bafflegab so I don’t think about other stuff. Non-productive head-noise.

Can I eliminate it? Yes?

By quieting the highway. By sitting in darkness. By letting my mind be unoccupied more than the 10 minutes a day while I am showering.

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