Saturday, July 29, 2006

The Zoo






Last week Olivia and I joined the "Holistic Moms" and went to the zoo. It was Olivia's second time there and she loved it! The weather was beautiful and made for a nice day to be outside. Several members showed up and it was fun to watch all of the kids react to the animals.

Meet the Grandma's




Olivia is very lucky to have several loving grandma's in her life. The first picture is Dave's moms, Olivia's "Abuela." Daves mom is from Bueno's Aires, Argentina. Then my mom, Grandma "Chop" who spends many many hours driving from Syracuse to Rochester to spend anytime she can with Olivia. Olivia also has two great grandma's....Great Grandma "Z" whom sings her very funny songs, and Great Grandma "Nan" who knits Olivia many wonderful blankets, hats, and clothing.


Bed Head style


Olivia first thing in the morning, rockin the Bed Head!!

Sunday, July 23, 2006

The cry

I went shopping at Party City to start planning Olivia's first birthday, which is only 2 short months away. My mom, me, and Olivia ventured off to plan this fun day. We headed straight for the kids birthday aisle's, which is a place that I've never been before. I wandered down the aisle until I found one that Olivia liked, and we began deciding on what items to purchase. The pattern that we liked was 50% off so we decided to take advantage of the sale. Then all of the sudden I was in tears....they erupted like a volcano in the middle of party city. My daughter was turning one, and this was her first big milestone, and the first birthday party that I would ever plan for her. First I pictured the future, and Olivia walking around the store with me begging for a "Dora the Explorer" or "Wiggles" birthday. Then I pictured how my mom and I will plan all of her parties for years to come, and one day she'll turn 18, and I'll cry just as hard as I'm crying now. I just felt overcome with emotion....like I wanted to hang onto Olivia in that moment and never lose her babyhood. I even put my hand on the top of her head and told my mom that I just want to stop her growth...even for just a second. My mom was trying to help by saying, "These years go so fast" which of course made it worse.

I quickly composed myself, but this first birthday just means so much. First it means that Olivia and I survived her first year of life, and my first year of motherhood...and we even lived to tell about it. :) I've never met a more amazing person then her, and she has brought me closer to life than I'd ever thought I'd get to it. Olivia humbled me and made me a better person, and becuase of her I am the person I am today. Olivia has made Dave and I so happy that we get choked up just mentioning her sweetness, and talk about her long after shes fallen asleep. Sometimes we even watch video's of her after shes gone to bed, and we just love every minute of them. It scares me how much we love her, because I know one day she'll grow, and we'll grow with her, but I can't ever get this time back.

So I cried in the party store, and then calmed down to have fun picking everything out. My mom felt bad for me because I cried and offered to buy all of the paper goods for the party, which was funny because it made me feel like a kid again, only this time I knew how lucky I was to have my mom buying me something. When I was a kid I didn't appreciate it as much, now I'm over the top grateful!

Vanity thy name is Olivia


I caught Olivia enjoying her view in the mirror...it made for a cute picture. The fact that she was holding it up to really get a good look at herself cracked me up.

Happy Shower Allison





Today was my friend Allison's bridal shower, and what a nice gathering it turned out to be! It was fun to see Allison embrace all of the people who came out to support her, and she seemed to even enjoy herself. Aghast...has Allison actually enjoyed a pre-wedding event? For those who know her, you know how stressful the plans have been, but from the pics you can tell shes really a glowing bride to be. Jennifer, Kristy, and myself are part of the wedding party. We're thrilled to be sharing this day with Allison and Tim. I have to say, I really enjoyed when Tim showed up...it was great to see the two of them look so happy to see each other! :) Now for the next order of business....the bachelorette party!! Any ideas?? Oh and please notice the beautiful floral arrangement that Jenn did....she really needs to go into business. Please encourage this venture. I also need to mention the amazing job Kristy did on both the invites and the favors. You girls are creative genius's and I only wish I had 1/4 of your talent.
Happy upcoming wedding little K!!

Thursday, July 20, 2006

Bye Bye Moby


Moby has been my betta fish for the passed two years. I rescued him from a dorm room in Cortland College, where my sisters roommate was keeping him in a small bud vase. It was a sad sight. So I asked if I could have him and they agreed. He's been living with us ever since. After Olivia's birth I just neglected Moby, and wasn't keeping up with playing with him or cleaning his tank. I was just feeling anxious that I wasn't properly caring for him, so I decided to find a good home for him. I always had this vision, even two years ago when I met him, that he needed more room to roam, and I always hoped that he could be with other fish. Well God was on Moby's side becuase I posted Moby on Craigslist, and an adorable mother of 3, betta enthusiast emailed me right away. She has a 52 gallon tank with all kinds of fish and swore to me that Moby would do well. So one week ago I packed him up and gave the poor little guy away. I was a wreck over it and worried that he would die. But Karlie the new owner has done a great job of keeping in touch with me, and she says Moby LOVES his new huge heaven of a tank. She said his muscle tone is developing and he swims in and out of all the natural plants that she has. He has adjusted to the other fish as well. Wow. Thats cool and I feel better!! Moby I definelty miss you, but you're clearly in a much better place. :)

For more info on Betta's check out www.bettatalk.com

Saturday, July 15, 2006

Strong Museum

Took Livy on her first museum expierience today, at 9 months old. My mother rang my cell while we were there and practically laughed out loud when I told her where we were. She didn't hear the part about us being at a "Childrens Museum." So anywhoo, the museum proved to be a nice family expierience for all of us. First we had wanted to go around 3pm, but then Livy decided to nap until 6pm....not a good thing at all, but I let it go becuase i was getting my house cleaned. So she woke up crying and alittle grouchy until I said, "Wanna go bye-bye." Of course she loves going "bye-bye" so off we went at 6:30. The place closed at 8pm, but it worked nicely because it was a short while, she had a fun time seeing some different things, and it wasn't overcrowded. They had several areas where she could crawl around and explore, and lots of characters came up to her and she didn't get scared. Olivia seems to enjoy new adventures, and she crinkly nose smiled at all of the characters that came over to greet her. The day ended with a parade led by all these different characters, and all of the guests got to join in. It was very cute and the staff gave us props to wave around. The parade was quite unexpected and even had a band leading the way. So we joined in and walked with other parents and I realized that I'll be doing things like this for the next 15 years at least. Very precious. The only glitch was that my digital camera battery wasn't charged so we only got to capture one picture. Bummer!! Then a trip to the gift shop caused me to wish I had an extra 100 bucks lying around because I saw the cutest toy on earth for Olivia. It was a rocking butterfly, so colorful and amazing that I wanted to scoop it up right there and bring it home for her. But of course I couldn't do that, but man I wished that I could have! When it comes to toys I am such a kid at heart....I love toys, probably more than Olivia does. But Dave loved this rocking chair perhaps even more than I did, which never happens, as he usually trys to talk me out of things. I even looked it up online and it costs the same on ebay as it does in the museum giftshop. Oh well....perhaps for her upcoming birthday in 3 months! :)

Friday, July 14, 2006

Prayer for unexpected income

I was listening to the Sunday Sermon at the Christ Unity Church via the internet and they started a prayer for unexpected income, and are asking parishoners to say the prayer twice a day for themselves, and anyone else that they'd like to pray for. I thought the prayer was very beautiful, and I wanted to post it for anyone who might be interested in it. If you want to hear the sermon about it go to www.unityrochester.org and its under the June 25th ministers message. They are asking people to say the prayer until September 25th, and to keep track of all the unexpected goodness that comes into your life over these next 8 weeks. My mom is also saying the prayer, and we're praying for two of the same people who are badly in need of income, except they don't know that we're praying for them. I'll try to remember and post about any unexpected goodness that happens over these next 8 weeks. This may make me more mindful of all of the ways that God works in our lives, but that we might not always realize. I'm hoping it heightens my awareness of all things good in my life. Yesterday I found 2 dollars, and also received an unexpected phone call from the Democrat and Chronicle that Olivia's picture will be featured in "Our Towns" next week. Now that was really unexpected!

My Prayer for Unexpected Income

I dwell in the midst of infinite abundance.

The abundance of God is my infinite Source.

The River of Life never stops flowing. It flows through me into lavish _expression.

Good comes to me through unexpected avenues.

God works in myruad ways to bless me. I now open my mind to receive my good.

With God as my Source,Nothing is too good to be true.
Nothing is to wonderful to happen.
I give freely and fearlessly into Life.
And Life gives back to me with fabulous increase.

Blessings come in expected and unexpected ways.

God provides for me in wondrous ways. I am grateful.

Thank You, God.

Tuesday, July 11, 2006

Motherhood article

If you never read anything else on motherhood, read this article.

Features: News and Features
From Deep Inside
(From Fall 2005)

by Cristina Mauro, photographs by Stephanie Matthews

From Deep Inside This morning it was clear my three boys (ages four, four and three) were in no mood to get ready for preschool. They were playing mousy. In the short time they had been awake, the mice had built a mouse hole with chairs and couch cushions and filled it with toys. A bag of baby carrots was perched on the roof. The mice were taking small round bites out of tortillas and peeking through them.

Oh dear, I thought, how do I sell school? My stomach tightened up and I was about to use a big voice and start issuing orders when something better prevailed. Mousies! I announced, please come here. It's time to put on your tiny mousy clothes and eat your breakfast in the mouse hole. The mice were delighted and scampered off to get dressed. After choosing grey shirts and jeans, they were soon gathered back in their hole munching on blocks of cheese. And then again, without hesitation, they loaded themselves onto the mousy school bus and, in a bustle of squeaks, we were on our way to school in record time.

When I pull something like this off, I am amazed. I wish such creative strategies were the norm for me. When they arrive, it feels like I am relating to my children from a deeper well, a place that invites imagination and creativity into our hectic lives. The mood shifts and my family becomes a creative democracy—a small incubator for world peace.

My brother's high-spirited two-year-old girl suddenly became unmanageable at bedtime. He and his wife were taking turns each night negotiating a high-stakes battle of wills with their arm-waving, screaming daughter who, despite her tidy blond bob and pink pajamas, had become quite frightening. After running through the usual methods of coercion, begging, appeasement and discipline, my brother took off in another direction. He invented an obstacle course in the neighborhood park. He ran her (and the dog) up hills and around trees, over and under obstacles, for a full 20 minutes of heart-pounding, giggling exertion. Rather than resisting her, he acknowledged that she wasn't done with her day. After her "workout" and a bath, she now crashes like a wet noodle.

For me these examples are small but meaningful detours that can transform parenting from drudgery to an art, or better yet, a form of play. I see water finding its way around a rock, smoothing edges and keeping life fresh. This is not the urgent parenting of physical survival, or today's brand of high performance parenting, but an approach that moves from one creative soul directly into another.

A recent issue of Newsweek reported on a demographic group of women who feel harassed, exhausted and beaten down by motherhood. They cite economic necessity and a trend towards high-octane, competitive mothering that leaves them feeling both overworked and under-performing. For today's mother, there are countless outside pressures and distractions clamoring for time and energy. How do we resist this trend and reach deeper into the greatest resource we bring to our children—ourselves?

Never in all my reading through parenting literature have I seen motherhood referred to as an art form. But why? I can't think of a more adventurous and bold act of creation than raising a human being. How then do we protect the buoyant and creative energy that inspired us to have children in the first place? And where do we go for the sustenance and renewal that everyone involved in a creative endeavor needs?

When I follow the thread of my own creative impulses for reading and writing, for fresh food, art and music, I begin to circle around answers to these questions. And in the process, I find other parents from whom I can draw support and inspiration. When I look and listen, I uncover stories of creative parenting all around me.

My friend Stephanie Matthews worked her way through a college degree in photography when her girls were very young. The family lived in a small house and money was tight. Her husband and children became the subject of her work. The black and white images she took during this time are haunting. They capture a vein of silent richness that runs through the life of her family. The photos (featured here and in The Promise) are a timeless legacy for her children—a visual record of how she as an artist sees them, with their beauty, their spirit and their rough edges. In a personal statement on her work she writes, "I made it into the darkroom to print for the first time and the most amazing thing happened: I exposed a negative, dunked it in the developer and there before my eyes was my daughter in our yard in a way I had never seen before." Through blending her role as mother with her calling as an artist, she nourished both her children and her chosen art in a simple and inspiring way. Her two girls are mavericks with a gleam in their eye that suggests someone has witnessed and honored their individuality and inner spark.

On the other end of the spectrum, I have a friend who returned to law school the same day her youngest son started kindergarten. She tells how she loaded his small backpack, put her hands on his shoulders and looked him squarely in the eye. Look, she said, I won't have time to help you very much with school, so you have to put everything I need to see and all the work you need to do inside this backpack. We can never fully understand the magic of one compelling moment with a child, but that boy took full responsibility for his academic life. He never turned in an assignment late, never forgot to bring things home and went on to graduate from high school at the top of his class. His mother will never know whether watching her return to school alongside him shaped his emerging attitude towards learning, but it's tempting to make a direct connection. Although the modalities of law school and photography are very different, the basic impulse is the same—two mothers each raising her kids from the intelligent, authentic place of her individual journey through life.

If a poet needs to find her voice or a painter needs to find her medium, isn't it the greatest calling of motherhood to find the forms of expression that bring us to our work with both body and soul intact?

My mother will be the first to admit that her overriding emotion when she brought each of her three children home from the hospital was fear. She was afraid we would get sick and die, and afraid that she would fail us. Somehow she thought if she could kill every last germ, we would be all right. Fear is a challenge to creativity, and many of my early memories feature my mother scrubbing. She scrubbed me and my brothers, the toilet, the sink, her own teeth.

But as I discovered recently, even inside this deep compulsion, there was still artistry. During my mother's last visit, I could feel the impact of her arrival within minutes. In the kitchen, a few things were lined up in rows and stacked. I started to unwind in an imperceptible way that seemed to tug all the way back to my childhood. Then she stepped outside to play with the boys, rolled her foot over and broke two bones. She was immobilized and I was left like a dog waiting for someone to throw a ball. Over the years, I had unconsciously come to expect—and even crave—my mother's ability to organize my surroundings. My brothers and I will never know to what extent her efforts allowed us to conserve our energy and develop as human beings inside a clean and ordered space.

Although I am grateful for this, the times that my mother's more creative self peeked through made the deepest and most lasting impressions on me. At regular intervals as I was growing up, I would come home from school to find a new book waiting for me on top of my bed. It was not for a birthday or to reward good behavior, and no thank you was expected. I would just climb onto my bed and read. Her book selections were thoughtful and engaging, and I learned to trust her judgment. The generosity of this gesture encouraged me to plow into books that were just beyond my reading level and experience the rewards of chasing after a more enriching read. In hindsight, it was also a personal and inclusive offering because it came directly from her own love of reading and dovetailed with the big pile of books on her night table.



My brother once coined the term "wombmates" to describe our sibling relationship. We have shared the trials and tribulations of being conceived and then raised by the same woman. My brothers and I are, outwardly, very different, but at the same time, we are linked together by the experience of coming from the deepest place inside our mother, both physically and creatively. Stamped indelibly with her spirit, we are like three paintings of completely different landscapes rendered with the same passionate, energetic and slightly neurotic brushstrokes.





As I write this and use the words creativity and imagination, I worry that they will be interpreted as a call to a cable television, domestic diva model, complete with craft activities and food cut in clever ways. Certainly, if you express yourself this way, it is lovely. But the stage is so much wider than that. There are infinite ways to share your creative self with your children—there is music, movement, language, color, sports, food preparation, the outdoors, organizational ability, spirituality, personal style and so on and so on.

Ideally, we get to choose from many modes of expression, but sometimes outside pressures can limit our choices. Adversity and scarcity sometimes arrive uninvited and force us to improvise and use our creativity in unexpected ways. Starting when she was 19 years old, my cousin had four babies in quick succession, each one conceived on a different form of birth control. Without a college education, she often had to work three jobs and sacrifice time with her kids. As the kids grew up, the family went through a house fire and a painful divorce. They lived in Montana and still managed to spend a great deal of time outdoors skiing, sailing, fly fishing and riding horses. Through all of the lean times, my cousin insisted on keeping her sailboat and making time to go out on Flathead Lake, both alone and with her children. It's ridiculous, she told me, here I am, a broke single mother with a sailboat. You could call this stubborn, impractical, even selfish, but I call it inspired. The message she gave her children was powerful—in the face of adversity, stay true to the needs of your spirit.

The line between remaining true to yourself and caring for your children can be thin. As I write this my boys are having a robust play session in their room. They sound like small drunken sailors. If I press on for too long, I will face a big mess and three empty tummies. At what point does the time I set aside to write become self-indulgent and turn into a kind of benign neglect? I don't know the answer to that question, but I am willing to step out on the line and try.

The call to the imagination in mothering appeals to my free spirit because there is no cookie cutter, no formula, no right or wrong. There is only a recognition of what rises up most naturally from within. It is a personal search for the singular and unique spirit that each one of us brings to the work of raising our children. Clearly, we can't spend all our days shimmering with creative radiance, but we can try and stay alert for the moments when inspiration visits. We can stop from time to time and make sure we have invited our best selves along for the ride. The load of motherhood is heavy, and there are times when the most we can do is stumble along, feeling our way as we go.

There are many inherent contradictions in our work as mothers. We are called on to give our children a sense of permanence while always staying in motion ourselves and making it all up as we go along. We are asked to be sensitive and strong, cautious and fearless, humble and powerful. The creative path winds its way through these extremes and helps to keep us whole. When our creative spirit blends together with the work of motherhood we can, even for one small moment, reach past the physical boundaries of being human.


Cristina Mauro is an Austin-based freelance writer. Photographer Stephanie Matthews lives in Austin with her husband Jonathan, their girls Madison and Charlotte, and their dog Logan. For more information e-mail her at stephisred@yahoo.com.

Sunday, July 09, 2006

A Family Affair

Spent the weekend in Cornwall NY, (an hour outside of Manhattan) to celebrate my Cousin Derek's graduation. He's off to St. Rose in the fall. Go Derek!! I am very fortunate to have such wonderful cousins, even though I only have a few, they are all really fun to be around. Olivia fared very well on the road trip! We stayed at my sisters apartment, which I got to see for the first time. She has amazing taste in decorating! I loved her apartment, and she has a beautiful deck right off of her kitchen..its perfect for her. Chris, her adorable Chris O'donnell look alike boyfriend treated us to dinner at his house on Friday nite....we had taco's. Yummy, and he even made me vegetarian taco filling...he's a keeper.
Things have been a bit strained on my moms side of the family, and I'm praying that things start to go back to normal...I guess normal would be anything before the last few years. Since my sister and I have become adults I think the family is going through a shift, and it needs to gain some balance again. Right now there isn't any homeostasis, and I'm hoping that some will be reached soon. The weekend was very fun, but I'm still sensing the tension with a few family members and I'm just praying it all goes back to normal. I guess families must go through shifts and changes??? Ack. Oh well....Good times...good times! :)

Friday, July 07, 2006

Nine Months old!

Oliiva is nine months old today!! Happy 9 month b-day to my little sweetpea! 9 months ago I was about to burst...notice the preggo pic. It was taken a few days before I gave birth. Yikes!

Miss Olivia cruises along the furniture now gearing up for the big day when she takes her first step! Yesterday she refused baby food for the first time and wanted the veggie burger that I was eating. When Olivia doesn't like something instead of spitting it out she opens her mouth, sticks out her tongue, and screams! Its really adorable and I usually end up laughing so hard that I forget to re-load the spoon with something else and then she gets even more mad! Little Lulu sure is funny. When she wakes up instead of crying she just plays in her crib and babbles for awhile..... talking to her picture board and telling all kinds of stories. Then when shes ready she lets out a cry and a "Mama" to let me know that shes ready to start her day. Oh and she dances like a champ now to any and all music, even my voice. The minute she hears music she does this bob thing, and then frantically shakes her head back and forth. Its quite comical. I was singing "The Farmer in the Dell" to her yesterday and she looked like she was going to dance the nite away! :) Enjoy the pics!!




Tuesday, July 04, 2006

Happy 4th of July





Happy 4th of July! It was Olivia's first 4th of July so we decided to round up Jenn and Keith and head over to the town festival and celebrate together. You'll notice the picture of Dave, Keith, and Jenn playing the quarter game. We had a slight addiction to the quarter game, in which I really thought that i was onto something when a few quarters fell out during my turn. Yes these games are rigged to favor the "carnival owners" and NO you haven't uncovered a hidden treasure if 6 quarters happen to come out at once. Walk away before you lose, in our cases I think none of us walked away ahead of the game, but it was fun!
We took Livy to the playground afterwards and she seemed to have a ball. Check out the photos!

Sunday, July 02, 2006

Olivia



I know this picture is very blurry and out of focus, yet it captures so very many things, including my heart. It shows my most precious daughter leaping for joy as Daddy has just finished changing her. As soon as we're done changing her, as fast as the speed of light she attacks all of the products on the changing table. She wants it all and she goes for it all, smiling the whole time. Then theres daddy who is leaning over to throw her diaper in the pail, as he very carefully assumes his role as "lulu's sanitation engineer." He always makes sure that her diaper pail is clean and ready for whatever, whenever, and however. (I have her arm in mine as I"m taking the picture...no we don't let lulu leap into the unknown, this one was taken when we were on double duty, tag teaming the diaper patrol.)
My little lulu. Shes pretty special. Its very neat to think back at this time last year, and how she was really just a dream inside of my head. I only knew her as my little kicker, and I could only imagine what her personality would be like. Lately her personality is arriving faster than I can keep up with, and yet I'm enjoying her now more than ever. Shes a little person with a whole range of expressions and emotions. Her favorite is the Crinkly nose smile, but even that is starting to have variations. She laughs with me over nothing....we just stop whatever we're doing and we laugh, together, and we laugh and laugh. Its so strange yet so amazing, but we're sharing emotions now. Sometimes during a quiet moment while I'm feeding her I'll just look at her and smile, and then we burst into laughter and crinkly nose smiles together. This time last year I could have only dreamed about this, yet now I hang onto this special encounter and hope that we can always share such beautiful laughter together.