Mary’s Longest, Shortest Time

It’s likely obvious to you by now, dear reader, how entirely I love my role as a mother. I’m kind of obsessed with raising these people. I love them as babies, I love them as toddlers, I love them as preschoolers, I love them as elementary kids. I. Love. Them.

I also sometimes feel like bedtime might never come and wonder vaguely in between wrestling matches and blown up ovens how much they’d go for on eBay. But despite the riches undoubtedly potentially waiting for us, on we press with all four of them in tow and we love (almost) every minute of it.

And that contradictory place parents exist in all the time is what some of us lovingly refer to as “the longest shortest time”. I’m in the thick of these days that last forever and the years that fly while I blink. I know before I know it my years will have passed and these tiny men will suddenly be full-sized and will go out into the world and offer it (hopefully) more love, more kindness, more generosity, and more service while I sit back in my E-Z chair and look on, satisfied with the results of the days that felt like years and the years that felt like minutes.

These years; the longest shortest ones, I’d imagine they’re pretty universally experienced by most parents. Especially during the Christmas season, I like to think that they were also lived in by Jesus’ mother, Mary as she watched her helpless, snuggly newborn grow into a stumbling, tumbling toddler and continued on through His childhood until He became the man and Savior He was destined to be.

I love picturing Mary gracefully and lovingly guiding her precious Christ child through stages like teething and weening and napping and trying solid foods and learning to read and write. I love the idea that she comforted the Savior who would grow to comfort us all. That when He was a new and clumsy walker and would fall, she would patiently pick Him up and help him begin again. And that He would soon become the one who would pick us all up as we clumsily stumble through life. I like to imagine that while He inherited His Godhood from His Father, He inherited some of His patience, love, and gentleness from His mother, too.

I’ve always thought it a beautiful miracle that Christ the Lord and Savior of us all was sent to us as a helpless baby who would need to learn and grow so much before He could begin His earthly ministry. And that one of His most influential teachers was Mary; a mother.

And I sometimes wonder if Mary had days she thought would never end. I wonder if she collapsed in her bed at the end of a long day with a teething baby and let out a sigh of relief that she’d made it through one more day without considering that she was one day closer to losing that child to His divine manhood. And on other days, maybe the picture of the cross loomed large in her mind and each minute that He grew a little closer to that destiny, she was filled with the desire to slow time down, never let the sun set and keep Him hers forever.

Maybe she felt that longest shortest time more profoundly than I can imagine. But I think she felt it.

The picture of Mary, cuddling her infant son in a stable is so beautiful to me. I love that we’ve frozen that moment in time for her. That sacred night and the sacred fleeting years ahead of her were gone so quickly. He was hers for just a moment. And mine will be too. Eventually I will offer them to the world in my own small way, to do what good they can and leave the world a little better than they found it. And although their end won’t be so profoundly important or so devastating either, I feel solidarity with Mary in the idea that they are not mine to keep, but mine to give.

I’m grateful to be in the middle of this. And even on my longest days, the ones filled with chaos and destruction and fighting and noise, I hope I’ll remember that they are only mine for this moment. For this longest shortest time.

Merry Christmas, all! May these moments with loved ones feel slow and long in all the best ways.

Pieces Of Lorraine

I’m named after my maternal Grandmother. We share a middle name which is something I’ve been proud of my whole life. Priscilla Lorraine, (who goes by Lorraine because she hates the name Priscilla) was a legend in my house growing up. She was frequently used as an example to illustrate my own mother’s self-perceived short-comings. The phrases, “My mother would never…”, or “My mother would have always…” were a near daily occurrence as my mom assessed her own maternal habits by holding them up next to the perfection she saw in my Grandmother’s.  An unfair, inaccurate assessment that I’m sorry to say I’ve continued in my own motherhood journey. Ahhh generational mommy-guilt… #TrynaBreakTheCycle #MostlyFailing

But the truth of the matter is this: my Grandma Heywood is one tough act to follow.

Lorraine Heywood had six children, kept a tidy house (aided and abetted by my meticulously neat Grandfather), rarely raised her voice, was the primary caretaker of her father-in-law for eight years, worked as a school teacher, made homemade meals, kept a garden, grew fruit trees, canned seasonally, baked bread, took her children on annual family trips around the United States, knew the names of every kind of plant and taught them to her children, sang like an angel, volunteered her time and talents at church and in the community, taught her children to sew, painted, and above all, loved her children fiercely.

How do you follow that act?!

No but really, though, how? Inquiring minds want to know.

In preparing for this blog post, I asked her girls to tell me more about what life was like growing up with Lorraine Heywood as a mama and let me tell you, there were nothing but glowing reviews. In fact, my Aunt Chrystal expressed having experienced genuine concern as a child that her mom might at any moment be taken off of this troubled earth, straight to heaven because she was an actual perfect person.

Of course, as logical adult-type people we know now that this can’t be true, but hot dang is it though? Because maybe it is. This woman was the absolute standard of motherhood; womanhood; personhood. It’s no wonder my mom wasn’t alone in engaging in the “my mom would have always…” rhetoric. I’ve even engaged in that line of thinking when I’ve unwisely compared my motherhood journey to hers. I’ve done the same when comparing my motherhood journey to my mother’s as well.

Which brings us to the first point I’d like to make: mamas! People! Mankind! Stop. Comparing. Your journey. To other people’s journeys.

I know, I know. Easier said than done. I mean hi, Black Pot, I’m the kettle. You know?

But seriously, stop it.

My Grandma Heywood is an absolutely outstanding person. And she is still a person. A person with struggles and faults and flaws (like. Maybe she skipped flossing once or forgot one of her kids didn’t like crust on their sandwich That One Time or maybe she said a cuss by accident. I mean, I’ve heard stories, Grandma so here’s lookin at you) She fails sometimes. She loses her patience maybe (I’ve yet to see it in person, but I’ve heard she’s let out an exasperated sigh or two in her day) The point is that she is a person. And so is your neighbor and your cousin and your best friend and that fashionista you follow on Instagram and Joanna Gaines and Princess Kate with her stupid, perfect, tiny little body coming out of the hospital in high heels five minutes after giving birth. But I’m not bitter.

These are people. With totally different lives and circumstances and experiences. And it’s a fatal flaw to hold your life next to theirs and try and get an accurate reading of ‘how you’re doing’. Instead, try to hold up the picture of your life today to the picture of your life yesterday, two weeks ago, last year. Are you more patient? More kind? Less lonely? …Taller? (One can dream…) You are the only accurate measuring stick against which to compare your successes and failures.

The faster we can wrap our brains around that truth and embrace it, the happier we’ll be. It’s true. When in doubt, stick to my favorite life philosophy: you do you, boo. You. Do. You.

Point number two starts with a short story. A couple of weeks ago, I had just managed an argument between kids and was in the middle of tidying something when suddenly, the words for the title of this blog entry entered my mind in a flash of inspiration. –As a quick aside, I’ll mention that one of the magical things that has started to happen to me during this journey of intentional creation, is that I have apparently become a useful conduit for creations who are embarking on their journey to become (for more on this phenomenon, read “Big Magic” by Elizabeth Gilbert) and am now privy to frequent bursts of inspiration and direction that lead me to write, paint, and sing all kinds of beautiful things that wouldn’t have existed otherwise. It’s very intoxicating and I highly recommend it. But back to my flash of inspiration–. As I was on my hands and knees, picking up who knows what after just having brought peace back into the house after a fight between the two eldest, the thought came into my mind, “You are more like Lorraine than you may realize”. It stopped me in my tracks. I have never considered the fact that I may have inherited more from my Grandmother than just a middle name; that there might be other pieces of her that are an integral part of the person that I am.

For the first time in my life, I had the realization that I am a piece of Lorraine. That my love of music, my passion for teaching and loving children, my patience with my own boys, my propensity towards creativity, my fondness for painting, my joy in an orderly home…these pieces of me come from my Grandmother; that untouchable, unstoppable force; I am a part of her.

What an honor. What a legacy to live up to. What an encouraging truth.

Instead of engaging it the comparisons that bring discouragement and defeat, I’m trying to more frequently remind myself that I come from exceptional stock; that Lorraine’s goodness is a part of who I am and that I have the potential of becoming closer and closer to the mother she is reported to have been. I hope all of Grandma Heywood’s children and grandchildren can see the pieces of Lorraine that live within them and can use that foundation to build something wonderful. Some of the best people I know are descended from Lorraine Heywood. I don’t think that’s a coincidence.

My Grandma Heywood’s remaining time here might be relatively short, but because she has created this legacy, pieces of her will continue to live. Art, music, kindness, generosity, patience, humor, knowledge, skill, faith and love will be passed down from generation to generation and will continue to strengthen this world and the people in it. She might be only one person, but look at the pieces she has left this world. Look at the goodness and brightness and beauty she has left as her legacy. We all have that power to affect the world so profoundly. You are made of many pieces and you will always leave pieces behind. That is our power. That is our legacy. That is our potential.

I’m forever grateful for my pieces of Lorraine.

Oven Bombs and Other Illustrations Of Forgiveness and Unconditional Love

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My kid blew up the kitchen.

It’s a tale as old as time. Or rather, a tale as old as Samuel who just so happens to be five years, five months and sixteen days old at the time of this writing. On that fateful day five years ago, an unstoppable force came into this world wrapped in a neat little package of unnecessary trauma and destruction. As my first C-section, he scared us all half to death by having tied a knot in his umbilical chord and exhibiting distress as he tried valiantly to come into the world. Thanks to a panicky, raging, psychotic on-call doctor, (it’s a long story. I’ll spare you. You’re welcome) we all thought Samuel was going to die en utero, but true to form… after all of the drama out comes a healthy, chubby, pink Samuel, demonstrating his unimpaired lung capacity for all the world to hear.

And his entrance would soon prove to be the universe’s attempt at foreshadowing as we watched that pink, chubby newborn grow into a vivacious, bright, happy, sweet, gorgeous tornado, who’s love and enthusiasm for creation and experimentation frequently lead him down an unintentional path of utter destruction.  Paired with his lack of coordination and excess spasticity (thank you, cerebral palsy) this impulsive desire to experience life to the fullest routinely wreaks havoc in our home. Never was this reality more apparent than it was last Tuesday at 7:00pm.

When our oven exploded.

We needed a few staple items at the store and so had promised the boys pizza for dinner when we’d finished the shopping. They’re never more pleased with my meal preparation than they are when we have frozen pizza. Which is super flattering commentary on my typical meticulous weekly meal-planning and homemade dinners, let me just tell you. *cue mom eye-roll* So the boys were excited and we’d just gotten home with our load of groceries. The kitchen hadn’t been touched yet that day because of reasons and so it was a disaster. The dishwasher was open and air-drying, the counters were cluttered, the pantry was open which meant the baby had pulled all the cereal off of the shelves (this is important later, hang in there). It was a wreck.

I turned the oven on to preheat (if you just let out an audible gasp and thought ‘don’t do it, Alicia-From-The-Past!’ I’m right there with ya, friend) and busied myself with putting groceries away, tending to a fussy baby who’d been awakened during his nap that day and needed to be fed quickly and put to bed, and tidying up what I could as quickly as I could. As I was straightening the counter, I noticed our thank you gift for the mailman hadn’t been tied in a ribbon and hung on the mailbox, so I walked down the hallway to get the necessary supplies when it happened: a crashing, shattering, explosive noise emanated from the kitchen, followed immediately by terrified crying from three of four children who had all been in the kitchen, waiting (im)patiently for dinner.

I ran down the hallway and rounded the corner to the kitchen and viewed the scene with growing horror. Shards of glass covered every inch of the kitchen. The floor was a sea of broken glass, pieces of varied debris, and burnt plastic. The oven was smoking and a thin layer of smoke and glass-dust thickened the air. Shem was pouring over a sobbing Samuel, checking him for physical damage. Peter and Sam were covered from head to toe in glass shards and dust and everyone was in shock.

“Do we need an ambulance?” I shouted over the sounds of distraught babies.

“No,” Shem replied, “we don’t need an ambulance. No one is cut.”

I let out the breath I’d been holding, “What happened??”

“I have no idea!” Shem walked over to the oven, which had been turned off already and opened the remaining bits of door. And there it was: an aerosol can of apple and cinnamon air freshener. Also a melted monster hat. Shem threw them both on the ground in disgust and fury. To my husband’s eternal credit, he got ahold of himself almost immediately. An impressive feat that I wouldn’t have managed as quickly if I’d been that angry. But in the moment, my only emotion was relief and gratitude that no one had been hurt. My anger would manifest itself later that evening, an hour and a half into our two-hour clean up of the disaster.

Samuel, who was having glass shards picked out of his hair by me at the moment, had started to shrink into himself in abject horror as the weight of realization was sinking in. He’d caused it. He’d put that can in the oven earlier while mama had been taking a shower (side note: new moms sometimes ask me how you take a shower after you have kids. So here’s your official answer: you don’t. Shower and your house will explode. Consider yourself warned). His burden grew as the seconds passed. He knew he was inches away from being the main event at our family’s next yard-sale. His little life was flashing before his eyes. He’d just blown. up. the. house. That’s a pretty heavy burden for a five-year-old to bear.

“Samuel, did you put that in the oven?”

The moment had come. He put his head down and his shoulders up, hoping to absorb his head into his chest and maybe disappear forever. He nodded. We paused.

“Thank you for being so honest. That was probably really scary to tell us.”

He nodded.

“What just happened, Samuel?”

“I put that can in the oven and it exploded.”

Shem and I launched into a pretty heavy-handed lecture about cause and effect and about using things the way they were meant to be used and how when you don’t use things properly they explode and how lucky we were to all be alive and how that could have literally sent someone to the hospital and how mistakes are important so “what did you learn?”

“Not to put cans into the oven”

I mean. It’s a start.

We started the clean-up process: kids in the bath, glass shaken out of shirts and pants and removed from grocery bags and open dishwashers and cereal boxes (remember when I said that open pantry would be important later? Congratulations, you’ve arrived) and started the pizzas in the oven downstairs in my sister’s house (thank goodness for sharing a house with your sister, amiright?). And Shem and I mused about the things that made that event an actual miracle (children were all facing away from the oven at the time of the explosion which saved their faces and eyes from direct impact, safety glass that had been used by visionary oven designers, a miraculous and highly unusual seating position of Thomas which tucked him in a corner, out of the direct line of the explosion, the list goes on and on.) unquestionably, our family had been protected. But that wasn’t the biggest miracle of the night.

After I’d bathed Samuel and done my best to fish out as much glass as I could find in his long strands of blonde hair, I was helping he and Peter into pajamas when Shem came into the room and let out a sigh, “Samuel. We love you so much. Even when you make mistakes.”

My throat got tight and my eyes prickled a little as I gave Samuel a big hug and said, “Yeah we do. Even when you blow the house up, we still love you” we laughed and Samuel jumped up and gave his daddy a big, bouncy hug, “I love you, daddy” and then gave me a million kisses and I saw the burden of having caused that explosion lifted from his shoulders immediately as he realized we’d forgiven him and still loved him. And that we loved him even though he’d caused such a dangerous, scary event. And that we loved him even though he isn’t perfect and isn’t always careful and isn’t always thoughtful.

We bought a new oven the next day; a used one we found on KSL (but still…merry Christmas, Samuel, Santa brought you an oven*) and look how much better:

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As Shem installed it that night and we swept up the last of the glass shards, it occurred to me that now our kitchen looked almost exactly like it did before. We even found a new oven that looked similar to the old one. Glass shards are all but gone, the smell of burning apples and cinnamon has dissipated, and our counters have been dusted and scrubbed free of any glass-dust residue. A guest in our house would never know that we’d detonated a homemade bomb in our kitchen two days previously. It has been wiped clean.

The only thing that remains is everything we learned. I check the oven before I preheat it now. Samuel doesn’t put cans in the oven (or anything else ever ever ever) and Shem and I grew in our capacity to love and forgive and restore as the Savior would.

Heavenly Father knew we’d mess up while living this life. He knew we’d make mistakes, give into temptation, indulge in the natural man, blow up kitchens, etc. And so He sent His Son to clean up our messes; to offer His forgiveness; to take upon Himself every, single one of our mistakes and leave nothing as evidence for them except the lessons learned. He gives us infinite chances to learn and grow without suffering any long-lasting repercussions of the shattered remains of our lack of careful thought. He cleans and repairs and restores and above all, He loves.

He loves us even when we hurt someone or say something we don’t mean or yell at our kids or cheat on our taxes. He wants to forgive, He wants to extend that gift of love freely and without thought of reward. He wants it for us. Because He loves us. Even though we aren’t perfect and aren’t always careful and aren’t always thoughtful.

He loves us even when we blow up ovens.

*Also other presents because Santa is really nice*

World’s Okayest Mom

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Guys, I hate to brag, but I have to tell you something. I am the world’s okayest mom. Like. I’m right there in the middle. I am so okay, that I’m not the best OR the worst…in equal measure. I’m not even exaggerating. My imperfection and simultaneous perfection cannot be overstated. I am super, totally and in all other ways: okay.

I fail and win with almost total equality every, single week. Sometimes every single hour of every single day. I have moments of Instagram worthy successes and moments of blog-worthy fails, sometimes on the daily. Kind of like these:

Success Number 1: Train Your Brain
We put a big emphasis on the power of your mind in our house. We talk about the parts of our brains that are responsible for different functions and how we can control and strengthen those parts in ways that will serve us the best. We talk about methods to use to bring different parts of our brains (like the emotional right cortex and the logical left) together to work in tandem to achieve our goals. Yesterday, the big boys (7 and 5) were fighting as per their daily norm. It had escalated considerably and eventually requireimg_9966d adult intervention to put an end to the violent madness. Once I’d saved them both from committing murder (all in a day’s work), they were told to hold hands until they had calm bodies and calm voices. Then, we talked about the importance of taking a deep breath and counting to four in order to allow the slower, more methodical, left thinking brain to catch up to the hot and bothered emotional right. They rolled their eyes a lot. But they didn’t fight anymore that day and I didn’t lose my patience once. Win.

Fail Number 1: The Lost Onesimg_8179
Peter (2.5) gets lost a lot because we sometimes forget about him because we have a lot of kids. Also, he’s super independent and has no sense of self-preservation when we’re in public. So. That’s embarrassing. Also, Thomas (10 months) was being really quiet for a long time yesterday before it occurred to me that I hadn’t seen or heard from him in a while. Went to go find him aaaaand he’d fallen asleep in his high chair. Where I’d put him. Twenty minutes earlier. So. Fail.

Success Number 2: Laundry Goddess
I don’t know what magic spell I cast, but it must have been a strong one because I’m going on week 3 of only having to do one load of laundry a day, getting it all folded and put away in one go and not having stacks of clean clothes balancing on the back of my couch for days at a time before finally breaking down and putting it all away to make room for the next three loads in the queue. I’ve become a laundry expert. I don’t know, guys.

Fail Number 2: The Half-Listen
img_7971Samuel (5) talks a lot. And I love that! I also tune it out a lot. He’s also really creative and has all kinds of great ideas. Several times a week, I get myself into trouble by only half listening to his barrage of conversation and mumbling ‘uh huh’ as he asks me questions, only to learn later that I’d just agreed to allow him to do an ‘experiment’ in the kitchen. Usually these activities involve the freezer and several different liquids or yogurts or crackers or deli meat or ice he found outside. I usually find the results of his experimentation later, scold him for it and then feel super guilty when he informs me that he’d gotten permission to do it. From me.

Success Number 3: Cleanliness
My house is clean sometimes!

Fail Number 3: Cleanliness Part 2
My house is a disaster sometimes.

Success Number 4: The Family That Reads Together
I’ve always had a desire to read to my kids a lot and I’m happy to report that I’ve been fairly successful in this area of our family life. We’re currently reading James and the Giant Peach and I couldn’t be more thrilled to introduce these boys to some pieces of my childhood. Good ole Rhold Dahl. I’ll never stop loving you.

Fail Number 4: Homework Is For Nerds
I’m not going to lie to you people, I am horrible at managing my kids’ homework. I hate homework. I especially hate homework in first grade. I basically (sometimes) make sure he’s done the bare minimum reading and then sign it, but (often) completely forget and don’t sign it at all and his take-home library book sits in his backpack for weeks until his teacher finally sends a reminder note home to me and my sense of respect for authority kicks in and we finally sign it immediately.

And now for the pièce de résistance:

Success Number 5: My Love For You Glows Brighter Than A Thousand Suns
I love my kids more than I can describe. I want to raise them to be highly functional, independent, strong, capable, kind, good, and happy. I want them to know how important they are to me and how powerfully they can affect the world around them. I want them to feel capable of making this world a better, safer, happier place to live. I want to parent for the long term. I want to use moments in my every day as a stepping stone to get to the final destination and remember that short term parenting is for short term results and long term parenting is harder because it’s worth more. I want to be the best mom that I can be.

There is no Fail Number 5. I mean, there are…trust me, I’ve barely grazed the surface of my short-comings, but the reality is that I’m trying to find peace with being the world’s okayest mom. I’m trying to remind myself that it’s okay not to be perfect and that average is the new exceptional. I’m remembering that when my goal is the long-term success of my children, that one or two failures here or there isn’t going to make or break my kids. And guess what? It won’t make or break you, either.

Mistakes are important! Mistakes are essential to our growth and learning. We make them all the time, in every single role we fill and we always will, because that is how we improve. No, being the world’s okayest mom, lawyer, author, burger-flipper, father, etc., doesn’t mean you’ve got a built-in excuse to play small, but it means you have all the tries in the world to get okay-er! You get to try again tomorrow and the next day and the next day and hopefully watch yourself improve and grow until suddenly, you’re more than okay, you are great!

Being at peace with being the okayest in your field is just another way of giving yourself permission to be imperfect; to mess up; to fall short, and then pick yourself right back up and go at it again the next day with your very best, most okay effort.

So go forth and be okay!