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1.26.2021

time

What I'm listening to: Older Chests by Damien Rice


My children's hands
once plump and dimpled at the knuckles
round ball of dough
warm and soft and little
their passive weight
like a feather in mine,
Now slender, with distinguishable fingers
know their own way
push and pull with confidence
peanut-buttery
keeper of tree-climbing bravery
and musical creativity
dancing over piano keys.


My children's heads,
once milky from nightly cuddles
slick from hands constantly caressing
silky, dark, downy hair
like the fur of a rabbit
Now course like mine
an art form, an expression of ever-changing self
ruffled rather than caressed
damp along the brow
and needing daily reminders,
you are big now, please take a shower

My children's legs,
once wrapped in rolls
like a chunk of chuck wrapped in twine,
fatty and delicious
graciously accepting of nibbles
and ticklish behind the knees
Now lean and long and strong
voracious speeder 
trying to catch the end of their energy
trying to leap upon the gust of wind
which will surely send them flying

It's as if time gifts me with a new child -
And every day I am grateful 
But the door is locked
and I can only peer in through windows.
A place I've been to, yet can never go back

1.15.2021

the coffee mug my grandma gave me




Eighteen years ago, my grandma picked up a mug at a little shop she was perusing with my mom and held it up to her. "Do you think she would like this?" On it was a vintage illustration of a little yellow-haired girl standing in front of a red heart with the words, "I'll always stand up for you, Valentine."

"Yes! Whitney would love that!"

"Do you really think so?"

"Yes, that is her style! She loves anything vintage like that."

She ended up buying that mug for me and gifting it to me for my birthday. That was the year we moved to Florida; we actually arrived on my birthday, our family of six packed into a white minivan, and it goes down in history as my "worst birthday ever." I had left my home, my friends, the boy I liked who said he liked me back. I was terribly sad, and angry at anyone who dared breathe in my direction. (My sisters and I have talked about how fifteen is the hardest teen year. There's just something about it.)

Shortly after that move, my grandma was diagnosed for a second time with breast cancer, the diagnosis that would take her through a two-year battle against the disease that ultimately ended her life on earth two months before my 17th birthday. 

My grandma, who was lovingly known as Mimi to her grandchildren (courtesy of two-year-old Whitney) was the best kind of human. She was a beautiful, friendly, extroverted, open, silly, easy-going, kind woman who had so much love in her heart for everyone around her. As a young woman, she longed to be a model (one of my favorite pictures of her is one where she is about 17 years old, posing with her foot pointed, wearing a classy late-50s ensemble complete with large curls in her hair and a pencil skirt), but doubted herself because of her lazy eye that was the result of having to wear an eye patch as a toddler, and so went to cosmetology school instead, and was a preschool teacher in her later years. She was a fierce prayer-warrior, lover of home decor, and a ray of sunshine. Sixteen years after her passing, I can still hardly think of her without tears springing to my eyes as I regret her absence all these years. I wish my husband could have met her, that my children could love her. 



This mug has always been special to me, as it was the last thing she personally picked out for me. And for that reason, it has sat up in my cabinets all this time. I was too afraid to touch it. Too afraid to handle it, wash it, drink from it, not wanting to imagine my heartache if it broke. With each move, I wrapped it so carefully that it became an unrecognizable mound of paper and tape, and then unwrapped it and placed it up in its cabinet once we were settled in our new place, where it would sit in darkness and collect dust. But it occurred to me the other day that I've had it for almost twenty years and have only handled it with fear. Every time I look at it, it reminds me of my dearest Mimi, yet I hardly ever looked upon it because it was up in the highest cabinet in my kitchen, safe from harm!

So I took it down, washed it out, and poured myself some hot green tea with honey and oat milk. Wilder slept for two hours as I read a book, the sun pouring through the windows on that bright January morning. For what was perhaps the first time, I truly enjoyed that sweet mug given to me by Mimi almost twenty years ago. 




I am no longer afraid - but it's about more than a mug. It's symbolic of some very tangible choices I have been making lately. I am choosing to be unafraid of starting. Unafraid of using the resources I have, creating beautiful things, unafraid of writing down the words that flutter around my brain almost constantly. For years I've stopped myself from taking steps or making choices for fear that I'll fail, that I'll not be as good as the next creator, that people will believe my words to be fluffy and pointless, or that I'll regret opening my heart and baring my soul to the world. 

I am so tired of that. So over it. I'm 33 this year and feel good about that! I am so grateful for the life I've been given, for the fact that all of my loved ones are healthy, safe, and whole, and that there is so much about living that I enjoy. I am ready to let go - to live out loud and have not a care how anyone else perceives my art, whether it's writing or painting or weaving or what-have-you. That's what I love most about this life - creating. I need to do it every day to feel alive, and I will do it, and I will share it. Not because I believe my work to be unique or revolutionary or inspiring, but because it makes me feel alive.

I am taking my creativity out of its dark cabinet.
I am dusting it off and drinking it in,
and living it where people can see.

1.08.2021

a warm drink

What I'm listening to: Either Way by Wilco





It fills my insides,
and sends the icy tendrils of winter
running its fingernails
up my neck and scalp
as heat moves through my tunnels.

It sends shivers to my knees,
I must be steaming from the inside out.

1.06.2021

all you need is a tree

What I'm listening to: New Slang by The Shins




all you need is a tree
and an open field
and a wide, gray sky
and a warm sweater
and lowered expectations
and the lack of stern voices
telling you to
be still
be obedient 
be quiet
be calm

think outside the box
get outside that box
get outside!

cast your wiggles into the open air
tell the birds of your heartache
see if your voice can reach the tops of the clouds,
go ahead, I won't stop you.

you want to rip it apart,
this wild chaos
in your fingers and toes
your muscles and bones
your skin and your brain,
how they itch!

but it's the scratch of the tree limb under your grasp
the wind biting the life back into your cheekbones
and your lungs filling with icy air
(deep breath. full chest.
can you feel it in there?)
that will put you back together,
stitch by stitch.

I'm sorry for all the things I've told you to be,
when all you really needed was a tree.





1.05.2021

peace and washing dishes

What I'm listening to right now: The Secret Garden by AURORA


When I remember Grandma's little white and blue house nestled in the trees on the hill in the mountains, I remember it bursting with people; I can hardly picture it still and quiet. In my memories, the laughter and bustle of loved ones fill each moment. Grandma had seven children, 18 grandchildren, and 23 great-grandchildren. The last two were born shortly after she passed last summer, but she adored babies and I know she would have been so proud to add two more little leaves to her family tree. If there's one legacy she and Pap left, it is that every precious soul is welcome - through marriage, adoption, blended families - they loved each grandchild and great-grandchild as their own flesh and blood. 

I remember her sitting on her padded kitchen stool in her black orthopedic shoes, washing each plate and fork and knife, or the colorful plastic cups that had each of her grandchildren's names written on them in Sharpie marker (I recently thought of these little cups and wished I had been able to keep mine). The low-ceilinged kitchen was lit by the yellow glow of incandescent light, and as life happened around her, she listened and smiled softly, dipping her rag in the soapy water again and again, scrubbing slowly and purposefully. She never complained about the number of dishes, or that she was the one who was usually leaning over the kitchen sink. She never seemed bothered or even weary of washing the never-ending stack of them that piled up after every meal.



I thought about Grandma today as I sent up a silent prayer of gratitude for my counter-top dishwasher, which remains one of my favorite purchases ever. I thought about all her little kiddos that she loved and cooked for and cleaned up after, and wondered how she did it: three meals a day, dishes for a family of nine. I dislike cleaning the kitchen enough that I might actually keel over if I had to wash that many dishes by hand.

But is there any greater evidence of a full house, a full heart, and people gathering in love and fellowship than a full sink? I think my grandma was aware of that whenever it was filled up again. She found so much peace in preparing food for the people in her life and taking care of them. Though washing dishes may be a thankless, mundane job, I'll always remember her at the kitchen sink, loving her people, an image of peace and selflessness. 

1.04.2021

better stories

What I'm listening to today: Staralfur by Sigur Ros


Look! We're going over a bridge!
Look at all the water! Look at all the birds!
Look at the steam rising from the surface.
What do you imagine is down there?
What do you believe lives in its depths?

What if you could build a small, yellow house on one of those little islands.
You would have to take a boat across the river anytime you wanted to go somewhere.
It would be so peaceful and quiet, just you and your little island, and the birds.
I could row over to visit you, and we could bake dandelion scones
with the flowers that grow there.
We could string a hammock from one small island to the next,
and sleep under the stars at night, over the gentle gurgle of the river.




Don't miss what passes by your window when you're traveling in a car.
It holds more magic and tells better stories than the small box in your hand is capable of.


1.03.2021

a year of books

What I'm listening to today: Stjernostov by AURORA
Listen along as you read!


The Puffin in Bloom editions of these beloved classics is so beautiful and has been on my wish list for years!
My parents bought them for me this Christmas. I have never read Heidi before, so it is on my to-read list for this year.



2020 in review:

I had the goal of reading 50 books in 2020. I finished the year off at 29, still pretty good considering I went many months without picking up a book at all. Here is a breakdown of what I read:

• 13 treebooks
• 5 ebooks
• 11 audiobooks

Which consisted of:
• 11 works of fiction, 6 being juvenile fiction
• 18 non-fiction books

My two favorite adult fiction novels were Normal People by Sally Rooney (the Hulu series is equally exquisite) and Out of the Silent Planet by C.S. Lewis. My favorite children's fiction was Anne of Avonlea.

Of the non-fiction I read, most were about parenting and/or education, with a few others thrown in there. My favorite books on education were Know and Tell by Karen Glass, and The Read-Aloud Family by Sarah Mackenzie, and my favorite non-fiction overall (and possibly favorite book read this year, period) was Your Blue Flame by Jennifer Fulwiler. Seriously, get it. It's unputdownable, and her story about Luxembourg had me cry-laughing. You'll know when you get there.


My goals for this year:

• I want to read 50 books. It's a lofty goal and won't be easy to reach, but I like challenging myself with a high number to achieve, even if I realize I won't necessarily be able.

• One of my goals is to go through my shelves and begin reading my fictional books, specifically, and give away the ones that don't capture my attention. I am book-buy happy, which is why I had a year of no book-buying back in 2019. I also tend to give a home to any lonesome books I happen upon (like at my farmer's market free book stand), which means my shelves are brimming with books I will probably never read, even if I took a fancy to their pretty covers and interesting descriptions initially upon meeting them. I can tell almost immediately whether or not I will enjoy a fictional novel, which makes me a little sad because I am picky about my fiction, and tend to not enjoy 90% of what I pick up... which should mean I will say goodbye to a lot of the books in my shelves this year.

• In February, as a family, we will read books exclusively by black authors. I did this back in 2019 and it was a great experience. I realized that the majority of books I read are by white authors, and that's really a shame, because I know I'm missing out on a whole world of talents and perspective. On my list of books I'd like to read for myself or with my kids are:

      Bud, Not Buddy by Christopher Paul Curtis
      I'm Still Here by Austin Channing Brown
      Pet by Akwaeke Emezi
      The Yellow House by Sarah M. Broom
      
• General fictional books I'd like to read this year include:

      Villette by Charlotte Bronte
      Ready Player One by Ernest Cline
      The Evening the Morning by Ken Follett
      The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R. Tolkien

• And non-fiction that tickles my fancy:
     
      This Life is in Your Hands by Melissa Coleman
      NeuroTribes by Steve Silberman
      A Promised Land by Barack Obama
      Untamed by Glennon Doyle
     
• I have a lot of goals for reading aloud to my children, as well. On our list we have:

      On the Edge of the Dark Sea of Darkness by Andrew Peterson
      The Witches by Roald Dahl
      The Ickabog by J.K. Rowling
      The Long Winter by Laura Ingalls Wilder
      

I am as excited as ever to start reading to reach my 2021 goals! The kids and I are reading up a storm already. It's going to be a bookish year. I'm also hoping to see my love for books and photography collide, and take more pictures of my collection. 


1.02.2021

first impressions


On the 31st, 2020 went out the way it should have according to the rest of the year: foiled plans, latch issues and a crying, uncomfortable baby, going to sleep early, awakened by midnight fireworks right across the street (after finally getting the baby to sleep!) that lasted for almost 30 minutes. I've never wanted to Karen someone's ass as much as I do right now was my gracious thought as I held a hand over Wilder's ear, praying he wouldn't wake up.


But yesterday. Yesterday was lovely, a promising start to 2021. The kids and I got the whole house clean and tidy (or rather, the downstairs areas... let's just be real, upstairs is never tidy). Wilder was in a contented mood all day and didn't require constant holding as he has for the last few days. (Not that I truly mind - he is growing so fast, my heart can hardly stand it.) John got off early - hooray! (The best part of my week, when my favorite person surprises us and gets home early.) He arrived with a box of strawberry cake mix and called Chasey in to help him make it - just because!

Then Sky, Emma, Anna, and Patrick all came over to watch Soul and eat snacky snacks. Afterward, Wilder was restless and uncomfortable as he normally is in the evenings, and after an hour of trying he was finally able to fall asleep, and then slept soundly the rest of the night (which included his like-clockwork 2am and 4am wakings to nurse).





Like every year, I have chosen a word of the year and made myself a few little resolutions, quite loosely, as well as reading goals for the coming year. 

I resolve to take more pictures. Write and update my blog more. Buy less books, again. (But not zero books. Just less books.) Organize my attic. Declutter and minimize my entire house. And make more things with my hands with the intention of opening up an Etsy shop in the fall. You know, little things.

My reading goal for this year is 50 books, same as last year - but this year I won't be pregnant and terribly sick, so I am hoping I will actually reach my goal this time. 

And my word of the year is gentleness - mainly toward my children, as I really struggle with this. I react rashly, with anger a lot of the time, and my kids don't deserve that. So this year I will focus on being vulnerable with my emotions and remaining gentle (toward myself and my kids), instead of cloaking my pain with anger (when most anger stems from fear, pain, or sadness). Vulnerability goes a long way. Maybe my word should be vulnerability, instead? Hmm, I'll have to think on it...

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