Celebrations

birthday candlesBirthdays are my favorite of all holiday celebrations. I love everything about them (well, maybe not so much the getting older part). I love having a special day that is just about me, a day that celebrates my existence. I love hearing my mother’s version of the night I was born, a story that takes on almost religious significance in family history.  I love remembering some of the ways I’ve celebrated all my birthdays over these almost six decades. When I was a little girl, my mother gave me not only one but two elaborate birthday parties every year. One was a family party,  for the multitude of cousins, including aunts and uncles, who lived near us. The other was for my neighborhood and school friends, all my hand-picked favorites. The parties were always at our house, and I have wonderful memories of picking out colored streamers with coordinating decorative paper plates, cups, napkins, and candles. I always had a new dress to wear, which meant a shopping trip the week before the big day. There would be fresh sandwiches (usually turkey and ham salads), home baked chocolate layer cake, and neopolitan ice cream. All my favorites.

They were grand and gala affairs, these birthday parties. And though I swear on a stack of Bibles that I am introvert through and through, I still recall being giddy with excitement about being the center of attention during these events.

When my son was little, we had a combination friend/family party for his first and second birthdays. By this time, most of my cousins had grown up, many had moved away. Some of the aunts and uncles were retired to Florida or California. Because neither Jim nor I have any siblings, there wasn’t much in the way of family to celebrate. Brian’s birthday celebrations became small family affairs, or maybe a sleep-over with one special friend.

When Brian was in second grade, he was in a particularly nice classroom with several little boys he enjoyed playing with. I had been feeling guilty about our lackluster birthday festivities, and I suggested we have a big birthday party and invite all the boys in his class. He agreed, so we set about planning how to fit 9 or 10 little boys in our small house. I moved furniture out of the way, set up card tables in the living room, decorated with streamers. I can’t recall if we had a “theme,” but if we did it was probably either cars or Star Trek.

On the appointed day, the boys descended. There was no worry about trying to fit them into the house. They simply took over every available inch of space. It was pretty wild and rambunctious, at least by our quiet standard of living. Cake and ice cream were consumed, games were played, toys were opened and wrapping paper tossed with wild abandon. It was a a typical boyish birthday party.

After it was over and the last guest had been ushered out the door, Brian turned to me and said, “Don’t ever do that to me again.”  Turns out what I thought would be a fun and celebratory event for him was more akin to spending the afternoon in the seventh circle of hell.

One of the hardest lessons we learn as parents is that our children are not us. As a mother, I had identified so closely with my son that I assumed he would love the same things I loved. It’s hard to accept that our children don’t alway share our feelings or reactions or preferences. It’s a lesson we keep learning, every single day.

Today is my son’s birthday. He’s having a quiet day with his wife and son, going out for lunch, going shopping, maybe playing some video games. There is birthday cake at home for later, and presents and cards waiting to open. While some young men in their 30’s would probably enjoy a day hanging out with a group of friends, maybe going to a game, drinking some beer, I’m pretty sure Brian’s plans for today will suit him a lot better.

But there is one feeling I’m quite sure that Brian and I share: The day our sons were born was the best day of our lives.

Happy birthday to my wonderful son. May this new year of your life be filled with happiness!

 

 

Beginning

life in general 2Sitting next to me on the corner of my desk is a mountain of paper. Six hundred and fifty six pages to be exact. When I’m sitting in my chair, the stack is almost level with my shoulder. From the corner of my eye it feels like a large benevolent companion,  patiently waiting for me to acknowledge it’s presence, offer it some hospitality, make it feel at home. Because it’s going to be with me for a while, this behemoth of paper. It has moved in to stay. It has come to be transformed from six hundred and fifty six sheets of paper into something wonderful and marvelous and all mine.

In the past few months I’ve sifted through archived writing that represents the past eight years of my life, events, experiences, thoughts, all chronicled on the digital pages of the three blogs I maintained during that time. These pages are the result of much searching and re-reading - they are what I plan to cull and craft into a small printed book of essays that are representative of this Life in General.

 Many similar themes emerged and reappeared as I revisited the pages chronicling the past eight years - my love of home, my need for solitude, my tendency to overload my life and time until I become frustrated and angry.  I recalled joyful moments when I announced my Grandson’s impending arrival and then his birth. Peaceful descriptions of summer days on the back porch, making my winter weary heart ache for such days to come again and soon. Painful stories of loss - so much loss in these eight years. And then two years ago the promise of our new house, of starting fresh.

Sometimes writing on the internet feels so disposable - we pour our hearts into blog postings and online magazine essays or stories, then push a button that disseminates them instantly across the universe where they become part of someone’s social network feed or blog reader for a few seconds before disappearing into the ether.  Creating this book feels a little bit like making a quilt, gathering the pieces, stitching the pieces together, and putting a binding around it to hold all the edges in place. It will contain the way I’ve experienced life over the past eight years and preserve it for me - and maybe for you - to learn from in the years to come. 

Writing on the internet has been good to me and good for me. I’ve met some amazing people who inspire me to keep at this writing thing. I’ve listened to and learned from their stories.  I’ve learned to use writing to help make sense of life in general and my own in particular. But at heart I’m a tangible person, I want and need to hold something in my hand to prove I was here. Artifacts of daily living are important to me. It’s why I cherish my grandmother’s sugar spoon and stuffing bowl. It’s why I keep photographs and greeting cards.

Life in General will be such an artifact.

I’m excited to begin.

Too Much of a Good Thing

praise-a-child-1024x625When you have dogs, you spend a lot of time telling them how good they are. Literally everything they do is deserving of praise, and, because they are dogs and they adore you, they eat up each one of your accolades with a silver spoon, licking their chops while drooling for more. 

“Good boy, Magic!” I call out when he eats his breakfast without my coaxing or cajoling him with tiny bites of his favorite treats. “Good girl, Molly!” I say, when she fetches a specific toy from her basket. “Good dogs!” I exclaim, when they conduct their outdoor business in record time so we can scurry back inside where it’s warm.

When my son was growing up parents were advised to lavish similar praise on their children. “What a smart boy you are!” we might tell them when they learned to print their names or recite their address. “That song you played on the trumpet was amazing!” “Your Lego buildings are great!” “I loved the picture you drew for me, you are so talented!"

It seems that conventional wisdom has modified that advice. Parents are advised against over-praising their children, at least without some qualifications. Instead of blanket statements like “you are so smart” or “what a good artist,” it’s been suggested that we quantify our accolades with specifics. “I know you studied a lot for that spelling test and it worked!” or “I can see you worked really hard on that picture, and I love all the colors you’ve chosen.” Apparently these kinds of statements encourage children to strive to be better, and reinforce the concept of acquiring knowledge and skill for its own sake, rather than simply to please someone else or live up to the standards that have been set in your mind by unqualified praise and adoration.

The basis for this change in thinking has to do with new neuro-scientific discoveries about the brain, which tell us that our brain is capable of growth and change throughout our entire lives, rather than being fixed at a certain capacity from birth. From this knowledge, psychologists and educators have extrapolated that children who are unconditionally praised tend to grow up thinking of themselves as “fixed” learners, as if their abilities are complete and unchangeable, while children whose actions are specifically noticed believe that effort is worthwhile and will lead to further learning.

I recently read an article summarizing research on this subject, and found myself getting teary-eyed. The descriptions of a “fixed learner” described me as perfectly as if the researchers had reached inside my head and taken notes on what they found there. "The fixed learner cares first and foremost about how they will be judged, smart or not smart,” the article contends. “They reject opportunities to learn because they might make mistakes. They are afraid of effort because they feel dumb and believe if you have ability you shouldn’t need effort. They don’t recover from setbacks, and decrease their efforts when they reach one."

Check. Check. Check. And check again.

I wondered - could my entire perception about myself have been different? What would my life be like now if my parents had employed this new method of effective praise rather than always telling me how smart and sweet and beautiful and good I was?

I know, it’s a ridiculous first world problem and I was immediately ashamed of myself for even thinking about it. I was the most fortunate of little girls, growing up as the only child of two parents who thought the sun rose and set on their precious daughter. No matter that they treated me somewhat like I treat my little dogs, lavishing love and kisses on me every time I turned around, making me believe the world was my oyster and I could do or be whatever I wanted.

Certainly they thought they were doing the right thing, although I’m quite sure neither one of them had been pampered or praised throughout their early years. They were children of the Depression, and although my mother was also an only child, she grew up in a small country town with parents who worked their farm from sunup to sundown. My dad was in the middle of a pack of six children, all of them less than two years apart. He considered himself lucky not to go to bed hungry at night. There was little time or thought for praise or self-esteem building in either of these households. I don’t know why my parents decided it was important to treat me differently. Perhaps because they had longed for it themselves? Perhaps simply because time and circumstance allowed.

I am an encourager by nature. I want people (especially children and dogs it would seem) to feel successful and worthy. I want that for others because I want it for myself. I’ve never responded to “tough love” motivation tactics. At the first hint of criticism, I shut down and crawl back to my corner, certain that I’ll never amount to anything ever again. But I will blossom with tender loving care and gentle encouragement. If ever anyone needed proof that positive reinforcement is an effective psychological behavioral tool, I’m your test case.

As one who believes in the power of positive thinking to determine attitude and action, it was at first difficult for me to reject the notion that constant praise can backfire in a child’s emotional development. My husband and I are both only children but brought up in very different family environments. We each tend toward perfectionism but for very different reasons. My in-laws were never quite satisfied with anything in life - everything could always have been just a little bit better, thus their praise for any of his accomplishments was always tinged with some disappointment, no matter how minor. My parents thought everything I did was perfect - so I was under pressure to uphold my reputation! Two very different methods of parenting, with similar outcomes in psyche.

I’m thinking this new concept has some definite merit, at least in child-rearing. Encouraging the specific effort, noting the positive outcomes, these are just different ways to provide positive reinforcement to children as they grow  without the added pressure of needing to live up to certain expectations - positive or negative.

But I’m wondering how effective it would be with dogs? Imagine this - “Magic, your breakfast must have tasted very good this morning, you ate it all on your own!” or “Molly, I can tell you want to play with the fuzzy carrot squeak toy. I’m glad you found it in the toy basket!"

Maybe in their case I’ll just stick with “Good dogs!” In the canine world, I don’t think there’s any danger of having too much of a “good” thing.

 

 

Enchanted

icy fairland feb 12, 14Enchanted. That’s how I felt this morning when I stepped outside, bundled up almost beyond movement, into the icy cold air. A rime of ice covered every tree branch, each one etched like crystals against the cloudless blue sky. The sun illuminated minuscule ice crystals drifting through the air onto my head like fairy dust. I  expected Tinker Bell to appear at any moment, waving her magic wand in front of my eyes. The dogs pulled restlessly at their leashes, their own noses to the ground, oblivious to the beauty overhead. I stopped dead in my tracks and stared heavenward, my mouth open in amazement, the air cold enough to freeze my lungs on every inhale.  I wished I were a photographer, a painter, or a poet - to be able to capture this moment and do it justice, to preserve it in my memory for days when the endless gray of winter seem overbearing.

Lately I have been looking for a way in to write about this winter, this breaker-of-records winter, this worse-than-ever winter. I think back to our innocence last Thanksgiving, when the ground was still earth and not covered with mountains of snow. We had no idea what was ahead, how nature would get stuck in her endless loop of snow followed by cold followed by ice followed by snow. We couldn’t know that it would snow measurably every week starting the first week of December. That schools would reach their limit of allowable “snow days” almost before the new year began.

We didn’t know what was coming.

But that’s the thing. We never know what’s ahead.

I do not love winter. This year has been difficult, especially living in the condo. I must go outside every time the dogs go outside. I must shovel paths for them because their legs are short and they are small. I must do the grocery shopping and errands for my mother who is fearful of being out in the cold, fearful of falling, of getting sick. I must worry about driving on icy roads, about how I will get to these places I must go.

But still, and deep down, I have not minded overmuch. I come in from the cold and sit in front of the fire, a dog on either side, reading and warming my hands. I watch the birds flock to feeders all around the house, smile at them when they peek inside at me as if to say “thank you” for the sunflower seeds, thank you for the thistle and suet, before turning their tiny beaks back to their meal. I make coffee in my favorite cup, arrange bright flowers in a crystal vase. I listen to Horowitz play Chopin and Mozart, pieces I’ve listened to for more than 20 years, notes that have (clumsily) flowed from my own fingers on the keys.

I find enchantment today.

Because who knows what tomorrow will bring.

I wish this for you, that you might find something of beauty in your day today. May it be something left for you as a surprise, like tree branches alight with ice, or something you create for yourself within the pattern of your own daily life.

Find it. Savor it, slack jawed with gratitude.

Be enchanted.

Gut Instinct

Someone once told me that I “live in my head a lot.” She didn’t mean it as a compliment, although I was inclined to take it as one anyway. What was so bad about being thoughtful? I wondered. Why shouldn’t I ponder and weigh possibilities in the privacy of my own mind? Aren’t we always being advised to “think things through”, to “weigh all the possibilities?” To “give it some thought?" But I’ve finally begun to realize the value of following my instinct rather than my intellect. And I have my digestive system to thank for that.

Dont worry, I wont go into graphic details - suffice it to say my gut hasnt been in the best working order. I wasnt giving it much thought, other than being annoyed with feeling less than my best, until I read something that started me thinking my gastrointestinal system might be sending me a deeper message than one about changing my diet.

“Thoughts can spin our reactions to whatever we encounter,” writes Martha Beck, “while the gut-deep impulses we get from instinct are usually more honest.” Instinctual behavior is thousands of years old, while complex thinking patterns developed during more recent stages of evolution. Yet most of us rely on complex thinking to govern our lives. We let logic and social training talk us out of (or into) situations where instinct might lead us in another direction.

For those of us raised to contemplate, to consider, to cogitate, the big question is how to discern what our instinct is trying to say. That’s where the gut comes in.

good-food-gut-heart-400x400“Trust your gut,” says that folksy phrase I’ve heard but rarely heeded. My left brain has become super effective at blocking my instincts, feelings that not only help us decide what to do in any given situation but preserve us from danger and distress.

“If you’re having trouble tapping into your instincts,” Beck suggests, “recall a positive situation from your past or a person who’s proven to be a positive presence in your life. Recall moments when you realized you were doing the right thing at the right time, or moments when you felt love and trust for that person you’ve identified. Notice your physical sensations - did you smile, relax your shoulders, feel a warm glow in your solar plexus?” Conversely, when you consider a negative situation or relationship, what happens to you body? Does your heart race? Does your stomach lurch?

I began paying closer attention to the ever-present tightening in my physical gut. Was this really just indigestion, or could it be my primitive instinct talking? I applied Beck’s litmus test to some of the situations in my current life with interesting results. Listening to my instinct is helping me determine what really matters to me right now. 

“Your life is waiting to help you choose what’s right for you,” Beck says, “even when other people tell you that their code-red desires should take priority. It does this by making things taxing when they’re not important and delicious and relatively effortless when they are. If you tend to include others’ priorities in your decision making, you must untangle yourself to know what’s important."

I know life can’t always be “delicious and relatively effortless.” But identifying the areas of life that are “taxing” your heart and soul (not to mention your intestines!) is the first step to changing what can be changed, and also to feeling good about making those changes. Most of the situations that tax my happiness resources arise from my need to please people, to help them in their endeavors, to be the “good girl” who always does what’s expected, often at the expense of my own plans and desires. I always think I have to do what people ask of me, think that once I’ve agreed to a course of action, taken on a responsibility, then it’s mine for life whether it proves to be rewarding or not. It’s taken almost 58 years of living to realize I don’t have to live that way, that it isn’t indulgent or selfish to want what I want for a change.

Now I find myself itching to get started living this life I envision for myself, the one my gut tells me is right for this particular moment. The one that has me spending more time in the sanctuary of my home, with the people that mean the most to me, doing the things that satisfy my spirit.

Picturing this scenario makes me feel all warm and fuzzy - peaceful and relaxed from the inside out. It’s definitely a gut reaction, and one I’m excited to follow.