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*

A Journey Of A Thousand Miles

img_9938This singular image alone is insufficient to illustrate completely the disaster that was my house today. But let it serve as a suggestion to your imagination as to what the rest of the picture looked like: apple slices littering the kitchen floor; dripped water color trails leading from the table to the sink; various pieces of cutlery strewn about willy-nilly as the ten-month-old unloaded the dishwasher (a favorite of his hobbies along with sorting through our trash can and emptying every package of wipes he can get his hands on). Not to mention the dried Ramen noodle on the carpet (pretty sure that’s still there) and the almost completely emptied Christmas boxes in our two-thirds decorated living room.

But more than wishing I had pictures of all of these messes so that you could more fully understand what I mean when I say ‘disaster’, what I really wish is that I had documentation of what this house looked like last week. Because let me just tell you: last week I was a house-keeping goddess. I’m talking every single room of my house, spotless, at least twice a day (morning and night…ahh the moments when the short people sleep) all at the same. time. This is not a drill.

I’m talking no laundry in the laundry baskets, I’m talking floors vacuumed and mopped, I’m talking rooms having been deep cleaned and de-cluttered. It was a dream come true. And I reveled in it. Cleaning, last week, was top priority. I was determined never to see a mess again without immediately swooping in on the threat and neutralizing it. It’d been a project eight months in the works, this nearly perfectly clean house. It started with a massive overhaul and de-junking in the summer and had culminated the week prior in the vacuumed edges of this paradise I was now at “leisure” to enjoy. I say “leisure” because it was anything but leisurely to jump on messes in real time. Do you know what real time looks like with four, tiny human beings who’s entire life mission is to destroy my creations?

But I loved it! I loved walking in the door and seeing a spotless living room, I loved waking up and wandering the neat and vacuumed hallways, I loved being able to find every single thing I needed instantly because it had been put back where it belonged, I loved doing only one load of laundry a day, putting it all away as soon as it came out of the dryer and not having to do anymore laundry because there literally wasn’t any.

I loved it.

Then, it all came crashing down on me in one fail swoop: the flu. It hit me like a ton of bricks…one moment I thought I was feeling queasy because I’d skipped breakfast in preparation for afternoon Thanksgiving feasting; the next minute I was so nauseated, I couldn’t move and spent the entire night awake and puking. (I kid you not, I was awake until 5:30 in the morning, puking every ten minutes. It was The Worst)

Shem got sick, too, and pulled his ankle the same weekend during a turkey bowl because the universe likes to watch us squirm. So you can guess what the first thing to go was. No, not our children. They’re still here but it was a close call*. No, the first thing to go was my beautiful, immaculate, I-will-never-let-you-get-dirty-again house.

And honestly, it hasn’t been the same ever since. Oh sure, we’ve cleaned up at night and de-cluttered and it hasn’t been a holy wreck the entire time, but the spotless utopia we’d been living in up until that point hasn’t been near the same caliber ever since the flu. I know we’re only three days past being knocked flat on our butts by the thing, but here’s the truth: I’m actively not choosing that blissful order this week. Because I’m actively pursuing other things and there simply isn’t space for Everything.

On Sunday I had a private devotional while my kids napped and in the process I mapped out some goals for the coming week; what I wanted more of, what I wanted less of, what my goals were, etc. and I wrote a list that looked something like this:

-Less social media; More creativity
-Less television; More reading
-Less cleaning; More intentional time with my babies

I know we’re only a day in, but that top picture should give you an idea as to where my priorities were today. And they just weren’t as devoted to my house. They couldn’t be because instead, we were busy painting and making homemade play dough and then using our Christmas cookie cutters to make some pretty stunning Christmas scenes and we were reading stories and telling stories and listening to Samuel’s fabulous ideas for the 25 Days of Kindness advent we’re going to put together this year and rocking the baby and teaching him “Itsy, Bitsy Spider” and getting into tickle fights with…pretty much everyone, and singing Christmas carols and watching Christmas movies and teaching our brains how to like fish and brussel sprouts. And there just isn’t time for Everything.

With a few notable exceptions, you can have anything you want in this world; a spotless house, a million dollars, a thousand friends on facebook, a thriving career, a huge family, a healthy diet, a bangin’ bod, good relationships with your kids, a second language, a third language, all the languages, …you get my point. You get to pick what you want out of life and whether or not you’re doing it intentionally, you are picking everyday. Maybe you’re unintentionally choosing to set the world record for fastest binge session of every season of Doctor Who (guuuuilty) or to eat chocolate everyday (that’s more of an intentional choice for me, tbh) or to become the foremost expert on That One Family from My 600 Pound Life, but whether intentional or not, you’re making decisions with your time that are leading you somewhere.

Intention is just steering.

Now, I enjoy living in a clean house (a cruel irony that I also really enjoy having and raising baby children because the two are almost entirely mutually exclusive) and so some of my time will almost always be dedicated to that end. And I’m at peace with that. I’m at peace in the knowledge that the time I choose to devote to keeping my house at an acceptable-to-me level of cleanliness will necessarily take time from something else and the amount of time I choose to dedicate might even change on a week to week basis, depending on the needs of my children and myself. I’m at peace with the fact that some weeks might necessitate deep breathing as I survey the state of disaster surrounding us and am working on listing the less visible accomplishments I’ve achieved in the course of the day (like listening with all my heart to a detailed blow-by-blow of what The Oldest created in Minecraft).

I’m also learning to make peace with the fact that in this season of my life, the intentions with which I steer my life are somewhat per-determined based on choices I’ve already made (like. procreating). And so in order to steer my life and the lives of these cute boys towards a destination I’ve always envisioned for us, I have to use my time for certain, non-negotiable things. I’m trying to make peace with the fact that things like cleaning are negotiable while things like… teaching my children to negotiate with kindness, for example, are not. Sometimes the thing I think I really want (like a spotless house) might not always be the thing I actually want (like respectful sons who know how to negotiate peacefully as men).

We’re playing the long game here, people.

“A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step; so watch your step.”
-Jeffry R. Holland

Steer intentionally. You’re on the journey anyway, might as well enjoy the destination!

*just kidding

Creation Over Consumption

I HEART BOOKS

I have a couple of book recommendations for you people. Numero uno: the one inspiring this blog post; Big Magic by Elizabeth Gilbert. And numero dos: the one responsible for this whole love affair I’m having with my creativity of late; Girl, Wash Your Face by Rachel Hollis (shout out to the Bakersfield natives who are crushing it!).

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First of all, drop whatever else you are reading and secure a copy of Girl, Wash Your Face. Assuming you are, in fact, a girl. If you are not a girl, go ahead and skip that one and head on over to Big Magic where all your dreams of creating without fear will come true. Just trust me.

Both of these books are quick reads, not because they’re particularly short, but because you will devour them completely in less time than you may have thought possible. And your thoughts and feelings and motivations will be forever changed for the better.

Every once in a while in the course of my daily living, stars will align in this very particular way and suddenly, my life will find itself on the right path no thanks to me, simply because I got out of the way and let things magically and miraculously unfold around me. I happen to believe in a divine Creator who loves me infinitely and takes a devoted interest in my progress and therefore gently nudges me in the right direction, but if that’s not your jam, you can think more along the lines of Elizabeth Gilbert who would likely believe that these moments are an attempt for inspiration or creativity to partner with a human host in order to become.
Here’s what happened to me:
                                                                 August 22, 2018 I post this very screen shot to my instagram story to complain about the insane wait list for the book Everybody was raving about.

6 Weeks later; October 3, 2018

Miraculously, inexplicably and unexpectedly, the book becomes available to me and I check it out. But I don’t start reading it yet because reading? Who has time for reading?

 6.5 weeks later; October 6, 2018

My church holds a semi-annual General Conference every April and October. This session during women’s conference, the prophet, President Russel M. Neilson, issued a challenge to hold a ten-day social media fast. In addition to abstaining from Facebook, Instagram and Pinterest, I also decided to lay off of my daily brain shutdown / television binge sesh during the little’s nap. (You guys, I pretty much thought this ‘down time’ was necessary for me to feel connected with the outside world and remember that I am a human being and not just a 24/7 Bed & Breakfast -and lunch and dinner- host of four tiny men)  With that time now free, I finally cracked open this book that had been waiting three days for me to see what all the fuss was about and oh. my. word you guys. It has literally changed my life.

See now, I have no idea how it worked out that this book which has launched me into maybe the most meaningful period of self-discovery I have experienced in my adult life, just happened to be available to me a full four months before it was projected to be and also just happened to coincide with the timing of this prophetic council to abstain from social media for ten days, but what I do know is that it can’t be a coincidence. Because here I am, blogging, drawing, writing, practicing piano, creating, and making things happen that I’ve been dreaming about making happen for years now.

In this highly motivated state, I next stumbled upon Elizabeth Gilbert’s book Big Magic which has been an unparalleled tool in helping me to finally overcome all of the deeply rooted, driving fears about blogging (and creating in general, to be honest with you). So here I sit with a shiny new blog and several dozen new photo editing skills and lots of new interests to explore. See? Magic.

One big takeaway I’ve experienced during this period of enlightenment and personal growth is the idea that living my best life will always have to include creating more than I’m consuming. I think that that part of my life had shifted out of balance a little as I scroll, scroll, scrolled through social media and binge, binge, binged The Good Place and This Is Us and episode after episode of my favorite podcasts and flip, flip, flipped through pages in the four books I was reading at the time. All of this consumption was part of a well-meaning but misguided attempt to feel connected to a community outside the little people I’ve created.

Adding to this problem is the reality that nearly everything I create daily as a mother (an extensive list, let me assure you) is destroyed in 5.6 seconds on average. Clean clothing? Stained immediately. Straightened living room? Cluttered instantly. Nice meal? Strewn about the kitchen willy-nilly and also harshly critiqued by three of the most obtuse culinary critics alive. It is the mother’s eternal struggle against entropy. So it hit me: I need to create something that will last. I need to make something I can go back to over and over and stare at almost as lovingly as I do my newborn children. I need to finish something that stays finished. And, because I, like Joan Didion “don’t know what I think until I write about it”, an updated blog seemed to be in order.

Unlike the last time I resurrected my blog, I have no expectations of this space or of the work that I will do here. It is for me. It is an outlet. It is an attempt at acting a conduit for inspiration; an opportunity for creativity to use me as it’s human partner to bring it’s work to life. At the urging of Elizabeth Gilbert, I will create without fear of judgement, without fear of rejection, without fear of misinterpretation, misunderstanding, or criticism.

I will create without fear.