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Gratitude

In My Shoes
Gratitude, Motherhood

Things I Want to Remember: Embracing the Kairos Time

Parenting is hard work. Really hard work. It’s harder than any other thing I’ve ever done. But then the most rewarding things in life don’t always come easy.

Glennon Melton eloquently sums up this conflict when she writes:

I think parenting young children (and old ones, I’ve heard) is a little like climbing Mount Everest. Brave, adventurous souls try it because they’ve heard there’s magic in the climb. They try because they believe that finishing, or even attempting the climb are impressive accomplishments. They try because during the climb, if they allow themselves to pause and lift their eyes and minds from the pain and drudgery, the views are breathtaking. They try because even though it hurts and it’s hard, there are moments that make it worth the hard. These moments are so intense and unique that many people who reach the top start planning, almost immediately, to climb again. Even though any climber will tell you that most of the climb is treacherous, exhausting, killer. That they literally cried most of the way up.

That “haggard and annoyed and angry” woman in the grocery check-out she describes, that’s been me. I love my son and think he is the most amazing person I’ve ever met. But sometimes, well sometimes we have days that make me want to knock back a couple of dry vodka martinis.

It’s easy to focus on the negatives, the “Chronos” time, the “my god is it bed time yet” time. Because you’ve got to navigate that time every day. Get groceries, run errands, prepare meals, keep the kids entertained. But when I look back on these early years of my son’s life, I certainly don’t want to focus on those things. I want to focus on what Melton calls the “Kairos” time, those “magical moments in which time stands still.”

So in an effort to remember those Kairos moments, the ones that make it all worthwhile, I’ve been writing them down. I’d actually started this some time ago but reading her article really brought home to me why I started doing this in the first place. I wanted to have something, 10 years from now, to look back on and remind me of the moments that made me laugh and smile. The moments that melted my heart.

Things I Want to Remember

…running to me when I pick him up from nursery, jumping and shouting “that’s my mummy!”

…repeatedly showing me, with pride, how he could blow his own nose with a tissue and then put the tissue in the bin. He repeated this process at least five times in a row. Get a tissue. Blow. Put the tissue in the bin. Repeat.

…doing E.T. fingers with daddy through the railings in the stairs.

…taking a book out of my hand and saying “I read it mummy.” He picked out Monkey and Me and “read” it to me all the way through. I turned the pages but he told me the story.

…taking the rubbish to the bin, of his own accord, at Starbucks. Watching him try to shove an entire Starbucks muffin into his face all at once is, well, glorious.

…running full speed into the Oxford University Natural History Museum shouting “Dinosaur, Grrrrr!” Complete with hand gestures.  Standing by a rock in the museum with a look of intense focus.  The woman next to him saying to me “He really likes that rock.”  I say “it’s either that or he was doing a poo.”  I was right.

…saying “that’s rubbish” when his little race cars don’t go far enough across the kitchen floor.

…squealing with delight when I press my lips against the outside of the shower door.

…insisting on getting out his tools to help the gate man with some repairs.

…saying “tom-AH-to.” Oh, he’s English.

…giving the iPad a hug and a kiss as he said “night night” to daddy who was away on business. FaceTime, brilliant.

These are just a few of the mundane but magical things the Little Monkey has been up to this month. You’ll see more of this, more of the things I want to remember.

If you’re a parent, how do you remind yourself of these moments and not get caught up in the day-to-day?

Gratitude

Happy Thanksgiving!

Today I’m thankful for so many things.

I’m especially thankful for my friends and family both near and far.

And, I’m thankful that I’m not a turkey.

Ode to Pumpkin
Gratitude

Ode to Pumpkin

One of the things I always look forward to at this time of year is pumpkin.  Glorious, delicious pumpkin baked into things like pumpkin pie, pumpkin bread, pumpkin cookies, pumpkin ravioli, and pumpkin soup.  And of course the Pumpkin Spice Latte, sadly absent from the Starbucks menu in the UK.  Like the Pumpkin Spice Latte, these pumpkin delicacies have been MIA from my table since I moved to the UK.  Typical American and our shortcuts, I’d been unable to find the staple of most pumpkin recipes, Libby’s canned pumpkin.  Yep, I know you can use an actual pumpkin, but I like my shortcuts in the kitchen.

Maybe the autumn fixation with pumpkins is an American thing?  Still having a few pumpkins decorating the house, I’ve been asked why we still have these around as Halloween is over.  What do you mean why are they still around?  You’ve got to have pumpkins around until Thanksgiving.

So determined to enjoy some pumpkin baking this year and properly celebrate Thanksgiving, I took the purist approach.  I got myself some pie pumpkins and went to work.

Pumpkin

After cutting them up, I roasted them in the oven in an attempt to remove the skins and get the desirable fleshy inside.  What I ended up with was a stringy mess that might have yielded, at best, a half cup of what you’d need in a recipe.  A herculean effort for little to no reward.  Complete failure.  I was now resigned to another Thanksgiving spent without pumpkin pie.

Roasted Pumpkin

However, I did keep the seeds and roast them.  These turned out better, and certainly edible as I eventually managed to eat them all.

Roasted Pumpkin Seeds

And then a miracle happened.  As I wrote about before, I’ve started getting my groceries online through Ocado.  And one of the things they do is stock quirky American foods like Libby’s pumpkin.  Hallelujah.

Libby's Pumpkin

Today, in preparation for tomorrow’s meal. I cracked open one of the cans of the Libby’s pumpkin I have now stockpiled.  In the end, I decided to go with a pumpkin cheesecake instead of the traditional pumpkin pie.

Pumpkin Puree

Thankfully, the Little Monkey had a wooden hammer I could use to crush the digestive and ginger biscuits for the crust.

Cheesecake Crust

And about twenty minutes later (minus oven cooking time), viola, pumpkin cheesecake.

Pumpkin Cheesecake

Yum.  I can’t wait to dig in tomorrow as we celebrate our little Thanksgiving here in the UK.

Sunset
Gratitude

November is National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month

Alzheimer’s is a terrible disease which takes an unimaginable toll not just on the person with the disease but also on family members that are often called upon, reluctantly, to act as caregivers.  So this month, in honor of National Alzheimer’s Disease Awareness Month, why not add a personal tribute to someone you know that has risen to this difficult task?  I’ve added mine.

Farewell, my sister, fare thee well.
The elements be kind to thee, and make
Thy spirits all of comfort: fare thee well.
~William Shakespeare

Me and Steve
Gratitude

Steve, Thank You for Everything

The news of Steve Jobs’ passing today has left me sad.  Sadder then one should normally be for someone they’ve never met.  I even admit that my eyes have gotten a bit watery at times today.

Relatively speaking, my love affair with Steve has been a short one as I only made “The Switch” about seven years ago.  Others have been with Steve for decades.  But from the moment I powered up my first Macbook, I haven’t looked back.  I’m sometimes forced to return to the world of Windows but it always feels like an itchy wool turtleneck.  I can’t wait to get out of it and slip back into something more comfortable.

And though my love affair with Steve may have been short, it’s been deep and passionate.  He’s transformed the way I look at technology and the way I use it in my every day life.

iPod, thank you for helping me run farther and faster.  iPhone, thank you for keeping me connected and for always being there to capture the moments of everyday life.  iPad, thank you for entertaining my toddler on a trans-atlantic flight and for making my book light redundant.  MacBook Pro, thank you for having the power to transform my words and photos into something better than they would otherwise be.  Apple TV, thank you for providing hours of entertainment and for letting me keep up with the movies I no longer get out to see.

Thank you Steve.  Thank you for being an innovator and for having the vision to create and design technologies around life.  Thank you for putting a “ding in the universe.” – Steve Jobs