Friday Five: Camera Roll

Does anyone else feel like this week has lasted approximately 3.5 years? Time is strange. Fall is a beautiful time of year, but it’s still a transitional season—everything just steadily moves forward. I think that’s why it’s the perfect time of year for a holiday like Thanksgiving: you have to be intentional about pausing, reflecting, and practicing gratitude.

I’ve decided we’re not going to talk about the 10 month absence between posts. Here’s five photos I picked from my recent camera roll, and five things I’m thankful for:

1. “You got an apple! Why are you eating the apple? Are you hungry? How are you hungry? It’s orange and an apple!” -just a whole mob of three year olds

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My job is hard…it is physically and emotionally draining…but small humans are honestly the best version of human. I love that they have no shame about being themselves, not knowing things, telling you exactly what they think. Being allowed into their funny and sweet little worlds is a gift. I’m thankful for my work.

2. We were on the way home from school/work when I noticed the sun setting, but didn’t say anything. Like most people I’m sure, I need a quiet ride home to let go of the afternoon. But Abbott stopped mid sentence and said, “Whoa! Look at the sunset! It’s so pretty with the clouds! You should take a picture, Mommy. I really like it.” By the time we got to a red light, it was obscured by the buildings and reduced to this:

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But that’s beside the point. I love that he noticed it, and I love that he thought it was worth remembering. Most of all, I love that he got that from me. All the times in the past 5 years I’ve pointed out things I thought were beautiful; now he does it, too. There’s a deeper truth in there about always seeking the beauty in things and the importance of sharing it. Really…it’s a gift to see the best parts of yourself in another person you’re helping to shape. I’m thankful for the blessing to be a parent.

3. Last year we finally looked into PPCD in our school district because I was at the end of my rope. I read all the books and articles and tried every technique to get Abbott just to a pre-writing/reading, pre-K ready level. It wasn’t working. The older he got, the more his disabilities became obvious. I fought the feelings of failure hard, but just a few weeks into the program we knew we’d made the right choice. It’s sobering to sit around a table while 7 professionals present you with literal charts on how far behind your child is. On the flip side, to see their plans working and their genuine excitement when goals are met is incredible. Abbott started Kindergarten in a regular class with normal kids. He still receives therapy and support, but his teacher makes no special concessions for him.

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He was very proud to show me this drawing of himself at school, walking to the office to help with announcements. After years of only seeing scribbles, a person you can actually tell is a person made me so happy. I will forever be in debt to all the people who work hard to teach him the extra steps he has to learn to be able to do everyday “normal” things. I’m thankful for our school district, their standard of excellence, and for public school in general. The resources they provide for children like Abbott are invaluable and important—and accessible to everyone.

4. I said I was done being “that mom”, but this is me up late making a Chicka Chicka Boom Boom costume for the school storybook parade. You might notice my husband’s phone with the Fubu app open, trying to get World Series game 7 to play.

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The livestream eventually loaded. The Astros eventually…bombed. Just. so. badly. It was the most beautifullay pitched 7 innings I’ve ever watched and yet, a big L. I’m still a fan, but this one hurt. I’m thankful for the Astros even when they (technical term) totally biff it. 🤷🏼‍♀️

5. In the 6 years we lived in our first place, we never invited friends over for dinner. Family, yes (though not as often as I wanted), but never friends. I had one friend who came over for crafts and the kids’ play dates sometimes; and another friend who had “drop by anytime but I’m not getting out of my pajamas” privileges, but that was it. I was never proud of our old duplex and my lack of ability to make the best of it. I know that’s not the right attitude, but it’s the truth.

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This pic is from last month, the first time we invited other friends over to our new house. The play date & pajama privilege friends have already been a few times, but these were the real deal: my Sunday school 6th graders and a family who were still just acquaintances. In a shocking turn of events (as in, I was shocked) I felt zero panic or stress leading up to the dinner. I didn’t clean anything more than normal, I left cooking dishes and clutter out I’d normally be embarrassed by, and I completely forgot to scrub the toilets.

Obviously, it turns out you don’t have to kill yourself making things perfect for people to feel welcome. Everyone had the best time eating piles of baked potatoes and personalizing tote bags. We got to tell the story of how we got together to people who haven’t heard it, which is rare. And believe it or not, no one commented on the lack of flooring in the hallway. Before they left, after I refused to let her keep cleaning up, the mom gave me the highest compliment I could ever wish for my housekeeping: “This is the most comfortable I’ve felt in someone’s home in awhile.” I don’t think she would’ve felt that way if I’d stayed up all night scrubbing things. I am so thankful for good friends and a table to welcome them around. That is holy ground.

Friday Five: The New Year

Remember the golden age in blogging, when everyone had a Blogspot or Xanga? When you joined a blogring and had an instant, engaged audience?  When posts were like daily journal entries instead of carefully curated articles (frequently sponsored) and made-for-Pinterest graphics?

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I do. And I miss it! Not that there’s anything wrong with today’s blogging trends—but I’d post so much more often if I released myself from the pressure to only share essays.  

So I’m starting a new thing: Friday Five. I’ll share 5 little thoughts or maybe a comedic-memoir-style list or something else that comes in 5’s each week. I think keeping a loose format will be the key to actually posting consistently. 

1. I just spent 8 minutes on the internet trying to find a similar phrase to “without further ado” because it feels overused. But I also didn’t want to just start the list without a transition. Google had nothing! So without further ado, we are now in the Five portion of this post.

2. I failed spectacularly at my “December Daily” project. 20 stories by the end of the month? All with unique imagery and coordinating titles? It was just too lofty a goal. I’m still happy with the fact that I tried to make writing more of a habit; I’m happy that I got a lot of stories started (to share eventually ) and I’m exceptionally happy with The Gift. So maybe it wasn’t a specTACular failure. If I post something Christmas-themed at a random point this year, you’ll know where it came from.

3. I finally  see a light at the end of the tunnel with this illness. I’ve never had the flu before and good grief, it is as bad if not worse than everyone says. I’m so glad Abbott got over his in time to go back to school, because I need a few extra bed rest/ER binge watch days. I’ve never seen the point of getting a flu shot before but these last few weeks may have changed my mind! 

this is your brain on influenza. photo by Fabio Jock

this is your brain on influenza. photo by Fabio Jock

4. New Year’s Resolutions are great. They really are. Sometimes starting fresh/with a blank slate/setting intentions is absolutely good and necessary. But where I am right now, my “resolution” is just to keep doing what I’m doing. I am by no means saying I’m perfect or exactly where I want to be! But I am so good at starting things; So good at doing a re-brand, setting a theme, using all the drama and fanfare to make changes. I am terrible at following through to completion. Last year I set goals to be better at two things: showing up, and finishing. I think I have succeeded in adding those things to who I am; but it will always be a work in progress—they don’t come naturally to me. So this year, I want to continue . No big fresh starts, just small, quiet ones. For me—that’s the key to success.

I love seeing people’s one little word projects, or hearing other ways they intentionally incorporate a topic or trait into their lives. I’ve never done the actual OLW project, just casually picked one that seemed right and thought about it from time to time ( last year: “Revive”, this year: “Dwell”) . Do you choose a word or participate? I’d love to hear in the comments!

5. Do your kids watch The Lion Guard? We don’t have cable/WiFi/local tv at home, so every week we pick a few dvds from the library. I chose this show for him while Abbott was at school, and it turns out he loves it! But he had me hide his eyes at a *very* mild peril scene with the hyenas. I think that means that he is DEFINITELY not ready for the actual Lion King Movie! insert cry laugh emoji  

Well, we did it! We made it to the end! To say thanks for reading, I’d like to buy you a coffee. Local friends, I’ll even deliver it (if our schedules allow)! Internet friends, we’ll work out a gift card. All you’ve got to do is leave a comment—anything at all, blog or non-blog related. Make sure you add your email address in the comment form or leave your Instagram handle in the body. I’ll choose one winner and announce in the next Friday Five post!  

Thanks for making it this far! Your reward is a photo of me from that around that same blogging era. Until next time!

I had my first pair of Vans and was very cool

I had my first pair of Vans and was very cool