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April 21, 2008

Most Alive Monday

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My big boy went to his first airshow this weekend which thrilled him.  B's "Pap-Pap" used to take him to see World War II fighter planes when he was a little boy, so when he heard there would be a show near us, he had to go and see what Miles response would be.  M already loves trains, cars and anything that moves with wheels, -really, a total boy in that aspect.  Needless to say, he was all lit up and they sat in a copter and even a very old plane that had been flown to California rather precariously (it made many emergency landings on the way). 

Brandon and I have no positive feelings for war at all, so it is a bit of a paradox that we would take any joy in sharing war machines with our small son.  Perhaps it is the energy of the second World War and the immediate and urgent cause to stop Nazi Germany that makes it historically tolerable.  The stlyish and daring fighter pilots and the pride they took in their small, sometimes independently contracted planes have a nostalgic, artistic appeal to my husband.  I love the artwork associated with that era, too.

Raising a boy means walking the fine line of indulging his boyishness and imbuing him with the sense of respect for human and planetary life in the hopes that his generation will not be faced with atrocities that shut down the natural response to be gentle and kind.  One can wish.

We rather unconsciously juxtaposed the experience with the creation of a tiny house for brownies that Miles placed under the plum tree yesterday.  It was a full, easy weekend of wonder and family.

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This post was inspired by my dear Wendy's Most Alive Monday project.

November 13, 2007

We Gather

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Just a little conversation can begin a revolution.  Speaking from inside of ourselves or out loud with someone we know, we all have the seed lying in the center of our beings for love, transformation and growth.  When birthed into words, that which moves us from our centers can manifest into movement.

I love to gather.  I especially love to gather to honor women, and I leapt at the opportunity to assemble a small group of moms to initiate a dear friend into the mothership circle.  What began as a subtle, spoken yearning by Keri to be surrounded by "mama energy" before the birth of her son culminated in an amazing, whirlwind weekend of food, fall color, mommies and babes in Woodstock, NY.

I'm beginning to be at a loss for words, so visit Wendy who found a beautiful song that I think describes what happens when we gather perfectly.

What stands out for me most of all, is the mighty courage it takes for women to fly and drive great distances to support another woman in her rites of passage, and how this is a lost practice in our culture that is making a comeback.  It might be easy for someone to shy away from other women or artists for fear of being judged or thinking that they may not have much to bring or offer others.  Nevertheless, women are sitting on floors and couches, on the earth and on the chairs of their ancestors with each other, sharing stories, fears, and finding their voices.

We must all keep having the conversations, sending out the smoke signals for support when we need it, asking for what we want, listening for the drumbeat, and answering the call to quest.

Here's to four amazing mothers, two curious boys, one brilliantly growing seed, and two that are being dreamed of today.  You are all brave and shining. 

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"If the world is to be healed through human efforts, I am convinced that it will be by ordinary people, people whose love for this life is even greater than their fear.  People who can open to the web of life that called us into being, and who can rest in the vitality of that larger body." --Joanna Macy

November 06, 2007

Off to See the Wizard

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You can't have a son and not wonder just how much Judy Garland is too much. 

M and I are off on another adventure.  This time we are flying into D.C. to dine with this fabulous artist and her family, then pile into the car next morning and head up to meet another of my favorite hippy mamas and celebrate an amazing mama-to-be in Woodstock, NY. It will be a motherboy explosion in the Catskills if ever there was one.

See you next week!

October 28, 2007

Rest in the Nest

I don't think anything could have prepared me for feeling as tired as parenthood has made me feel.  I've never been one to be able to burn the candle at both ends for too long without feeling it, but lately I feel I could go to sleep for days.  My fantasy is that my dreams would work through all of my mental quandries and I would wake up feeling refreshed and recharged.

Working as a massage therapist means that I deliver much-needed rest and healing to others, which is a strong declaration for anyone once they claim that service for themselves, don't you think?

I think being an older mom means that I don't have the energy these twenty-something moms have (Nina).  This makes it really difficult for me to decide whether to have another baby, which is on my mind a lot lately, too.  I can't imagine feeling this tired three or four years from now!  Miles usually sleeps through the night in his room and has been doing this pretty consistently for nearly a year.  I feel like I need to pay back the deficit from all of the moving, travelling and sick nights back in the summer. 

I have got to take this season to slow down.  I think I need to strategize. Do you know of any tricks I might try? Here are some things I thought I could do to try to recharge myself:

*Do less.

*Make fewer plans at night and on weekends.

*Hire a housekeeper.

*Eat power foods.

*Cook for the upcoming week on weekends.

*Take my vitamins instead of letting them rot on the shelves.

*Exercise.  Hello!

*Try to sleep in one day on the weekend.

I'm sure there is an antiquated copy of Women's Day magazine lying around in a local thrift store that has all of the answers.  That would be too easy.  Send your amazing magical remedies my way and help a Pixie out.

October 03, 2007

Ecoliteracy and Visionarianism for the Holidays

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I have to share this site with you because I love it so much.  Even before I had my own child, I have been fascinated with what growing food can do for children and adults.  How it has the power to revolutionize our schools and schoolchildren EXCITES me! 

I've always loved Alice Waters' story, each time I've caught a little promo in a magazine or a book over the years, I relish her vision and the results of her tenacious journey into this territory.

As my baby gets older and I move out of the mama cave and into the world with him, I find that I'm thinking more and more about health and of our impact on his world. 

This year, we have declared and committed ourselves, through the inspiration of friends and our own hearts yearnings, to a "No Made in China and No Plastic" holiday celebration.  It is another step on the path of awareness of our consumption and responsibility for what turns up in landfills.  I will very soon have some lovely alternatives here to share with you.

I do realize that I have effectively not tied the ideas in this post together but am going to just leave it alone this time.

August 23, 2007

Basketful of Fun

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I've been wanting to get Miles a toy that would involve plenty of movement and imagination, and had been thinking about a shopping cart and some play food for months.  We have a walk in pantry, which I thought could be fun for him to "put his groceries away" in.

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I settled on a metal one from Costco ($27 .99 with 30 pcs of food) because it seemed like it could be passed down to a long line of little shoppers.  The plastic ones at Toys R Us ($14.99) looked really cheap, the food boxes were crummy, and it would not have withstood scads of children bashing it into walls and overturning it.  The casters were well-fashioned, but could be replaced if needed,-they're just like real shopping cart wheels, they spin completely around and turn sharply.  (There was a metal cart at Target for $24.99, but it came with no food and the seperately sold food, though wooden, was not fun and was quite pricey).  There are some great companies with wooden food sets, but I'm concerned about the use of wood as well, and many of them are made in China.  At least the wooden food will last through generations-should I decide to expand our collection, I believe I'll go that route.

I didn't like that the cart was made in China (almost all children's toys are), but I sucked it up and decided to try to bring the world back into harmony (!) by recycling the packaging into something fun.  I love this kitchen, but I think it is too much to spend on a toy that may not get much use in a couple of years, plus it just seems "too nice". Here's what came of my kitchen yearning and the leftover box and cardboard bits:

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A crafty stove with glittery burners and opening door!  This is all the proof I need that a little gorilla glue and a box holds limitless possibilities.  You can't see the weird brown piece of cheap plastic steak and clump of peas in the pan, but if you could, it would bring back memories!  It is for this reason that I impulsively purchased the plastic blue pan and 6 pcs of plastic food to enhance the cooking experience.  I still have to attach the spinning knobs (Clever use of sports drink lids glued to butterflying brads).

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August 14, 2007

Guest Blogger: The Challenges of Parenting

Today I am sending out an offering of my beautiful friend and her wisdom:

The Challenges of Parenting by Stephanie Anderson Ladd, MA, MFT

As a marriage and family therapist, it was not unusual for me to get a call from a frustrated parent wanting me to see her 4 year-old son for behavioral problems.  He had recently been sent home from pre-school, first for hitting, then kicking, and on his third strike, for biting another child.

We set up an appointment and I surmised that the curious, smart little boy in front of me was taking out his anger at pre-school because his parents were operating at opposite extremes when it came to discipline.  He had a new baby sister that was suddenly the star attraction and he was often caught treating her roughly when he thought no one was looking.  Mom felt guilty that she didn't have enough time for him and tended to lecture him when he misbehaved and dad usually spanked him for his misdeeds.  Both mom and dad used the same parenting techniques learned in their respective families and generally disagreed about the most effective way to parent their son.

The first thing I helped them understand was that their child had feelings of jealousy about being "dethroned" and needed help with these feelings as well as needing to be stopped from hurting his sister. The second issue was discussing more effective ways of discipline than lecturing or spanking. Spanking is an ineffectual mode of discipline that creates feelings of anger, helplessness, and loss of control that often backfires later when the child tries to take control of others. Lecturing doesn't work either, as children quickly tune out.

As I worked with them to learn what natural consequences might look like (see examples below), I also referred them to parenting classes at The Institute for Professional Parenting (TIPP) in Valencia, CA. Soon, these parents were on their way to trying new skills that allowed their son to express his feelings appropriately, resulting in a calmer, more secure child.

Parents at odds about how best to raise their children is not an unusual situation and was one of the impetuses for starting TIPP, a non-profit organization committed to teaching parenting skills as well as helping people heal from childhood pain and trauma. TIPP was founded by Dr. Faye Snyder, Psy. D. who has dedicated her life to understanding and teaching how personality is made, not born

The causal theory is the basis for the 8 week Miracle Child parenting series offered five times a year in Valencia and West Los Angeles, CA.  The parenting classes will soon be offered on DVD and audio CD.  The next series of classes begins in Valencia on September 12, 2007.

Having taught and counseled parents for some time, I have noticed that parents ask more questions about discipline than anything else. They want to know what's too much, what's not enough, what is effective for what age and what is not.

Here are a few basic do's and don'ts of discipline:

Don't discipline in anger.

If you lose control, you appear weak to the child. It may be important to look at your own anger and determine if you are trying to get even for your own childhood and how you were parented (you may need to deal with your own anger issues first).

Do set a good example by modeling the kind of behavior you expect of your children.

Hitting children teaches them that it is okay to hit and that violence is a way to solve problems; not a message we want to send our children out into the world with.  Parents need to ask themselves: Do I clean up my own mess?  Do I admit when I am wrong? Do I keep my commitments? We can't expect our children to do as I say but not as I do.

Don't hit, yell at, name-call, shame, or otherwise demean your children when they misbehave.  Give them a natural consequence for their behavior-one that is logical and naturally follows from the infraction.

A natural consequence for pushing another child is not being able to play with that child until he uses words instead of hurting and ammends are made.   If the behavior is repeated, then the child will learn that no one wants to play with him and that his parents will not allow him to play with others until he is safe.  (We also want to find out what the child is angry about and causing him to act out.)  A teenager gets freedom equal to the amount of reponsibility she exhibits.  If she doesn't do her homework and her grades slip, her privileges (cell phone, computer time, or other distractions), are revoked until the grades improve.

Do let your children know what you expect and set limits without guilt.

Children understand fair rules and reasonable expectations. Long explanations and lecturing imply that you don't recognize your childs ability to figure things out and learn from her mistakes. When children experience natural consequences they get the lesson and you never need say, "I told you so". (Pixie would add that this works with spouses, too-Hi Brandon!)

Don't set limits without following through with consequences.

Repeated warnings only tells a child you don't mean what you say.  Weak or inconsistent limits with no consequences create a mean, inconsiderate, angry child who continually pushes the envelope. This child secretly wants to be stopped.

Do get help if what you're doing isn't working.

Children are our mirrors, their behavior is a reflection of how we are parenting them. It helps to remember that parenting is a learning process-for both children and parents.

Ongoing parenting classes are available at The Institute of Professional Parenting located at 28416 Constellation Road in Valencia, CA, for more information, call(661)-294-8477.

Stephanie Anderson is a psychotherapist with a private practice in Pine Mountain and Valencia, CA.  She is available as a parenting coach by telephone appointment-call or email with inquiries: (661)-242-0719 stephanieladd@earthlink.net

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Stephanie is one of my dearest friends and I want to thank her for writing this article!  Without her encouragement and total faith in my ability to heal and create a healthy family, I would not be a parent today.  She is pictured here with her daughter, Chloe and sweet mutt, Maggie. 

August 07, 2007

The Most Difficult Thing

I'm sure there are not one, but two billion different answers to this question.  Post anonymously if the safety will help you be more honest.

What is the most difficult thing about motherhood?

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May 13, 2007

Mother's Day

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         A boy.                                    A tree.                     A trailer.

         What more could a mother ask for when all is divine?

May 09, 2007

Freedom From Self Improvement Day

Pixspgreen_1_1_3 I'm super excited about the launch of Jennifer Louden's holiday: Freedom From Self Improvement Day on May 14th.

It means a great deal to me that Jennifer does the work that she does: actively and wisely leading women toward self-care.  It would seem that most of us were not taught how to take care of ourselves- I wasn't, so now I live forgetting to do things like EAT and SLEEP, and be nice to myself when I'm struggling. 

Jen says, "After all, I’m the perfect paradox: my mission in life is to help people feel how perfectly okay they are and I constantly struggle with evaluating myself for everything I’m not doing or didn’t do right".

This really resonates with me.  Being a parent has made my self-awareness and evaluation multiply by about a bazillion.  I really don't want to f*ck up my kid, so I second guess what I'm doing with him a lot, which leads to trying to improve myself every minute of the day.   Many times, it isn't very productive.

Some of my favorite non-self help writers will be contributing to this project, and I'm ecstatic about hearing what they have to say about all of this "don'ting" and "shoulding" that rains down in our inner ears.

I intend to fully embrace Jennifer's holiday, and turn that switch off next week!  Want to play with me?

April 23, 2007

The Feminist What?

I've drank a bit too much coffee this morning and not had any breakfast yet.  This would explain part of the trembling that is moving from my head to my toes.  But not all of it.

A couple of days ago, I was sent a book review from U.S.A. Today by a dear friend who is a mother, a child advocate, a Marriage and Family Therapist and a feminist.  The book is called "The Feminist Mistake", a marketing play on words from feminist superhero Betty Freidan's The Feminine Mystique. The subheading for the article read: "is a well-crafted cautionary tale for women of all ages."  Though the review does point out that Leslie Bennetts' weakness is that her "campaign for financial autonomy is so shrill and unrelenting that it borders on a harangue,"  it promotes Bennetts' book, the main point of which hinges on the idea that "Women should make work a top priority with the lifelong goal of self-sufficiency". 

It is tempting for me to ask where Bennetts has been while her two children were growing up?  I want to lash out in anger at her for steering women away from their children and toward their careers.  Why?  Because her premise reeks of her own trust issues, which she barfs out on women who are taking care of their first responsiblity: the children they chose to bring into this world.  I suppose I am trembling because this review says nothing about the decision to not have children in favor of a career.  It sounds like women should strive for it all, marriage, work, and children-however neglecting of the marriage and children that may be.  Because after you've nailed the perfect American life, hurry back to work so you can self-preserve. 

I'm projecting, of course.  Like I do.  I haven't read the book.  But I already hate it.  Haranguing?  Is she attempting to bully women into neglecting their children because of her mother's and grandmother's weaknesses?  I just don't get it.

My friend, the one who forwarded the review, wrote a rebuttal to be published here and hopefully elsewhere.  I'm pretty sure the ezine gets mailed to your inbox, so do check it out to read the complete rebuttal. 

In the meantime, here's a tidbit: "While I can appreciate Leslie Bennett's message to women regarding the importance of financial autonomy, it is not as black and white as she seems to portray it.  I take exception to the idea that women who drop out of the workforce or scale back when they have children are making a mistake or running the risk of derailing their careers. It need not be that way."

And more: "Perhaps women need to ask themselves this question: Which matters most--my children or my career? If the answer is their career, it is a crime that they bothered to have children. I have counseled too many clients whose issues started with the abandonment and neglect they experienced as children because they had a working mom as well as a working dad or perhaps an absent dad. Kids that are put into daycare after mom's maternity leave is up without a thought to the abandonment and neglect they will experience at being away from their primary caregiver all day are the kids we see today with behavioral problems from anger to aggression/violence to ADD, childhood depression, anxiety, and other lifelong problems occurring with greater frequency than ever before. Women do not have to give up a career entirely if it is important to them, but parents need to put their child's needs first." 

One of my favorite blogmamas also has a strong sentiment worth reading.  She presents the economic facts about women in the workplace.

I have very strong feelings about what our personal damage drives us to do.  Children are always the sacrafices for our shit.  It angers me, saddens me, hits me like a boot in the belly to see neglect and abuse everywhere I go.  In my opinion Bennetts is using her Vanity Fair status to push her ideas that children will be fine without their parents. 

The woman I love to listen to calls this The Tulip Theory: "Many, but not all, of these women were not well-nurtured themselves, or they have a low bar for what they think children need, because they may not have been sufficiently mothered as much as children need to be nurtured. So, they are a little cold to the idea of mothering, which is one of the long-term side effects of daycare and nannys. These wonderfully strong and creative women are operating on the Tulip Theory. They think that everything the child needs is inside, just like everything the tulip needs is in the bulb. They think that children need a good home in a good neighborhood, a good school, a good nanny or day care provider, a good role model, and they will be fine. They actually think the issue is about quality daycare. They have different ideas of what "fine" is than we do. They don't know that any and every child (who doesn't actually have a physical brain abnormality or disability) can be a genius and can go for greatness. They don't realize that they are settling for less. They don't know that their children need them, and no one else can take their place. They don't know that there are degrees of impact on the child who is farmed out, depending upon how young and for how long. They don't know that this is a mental health issue."

Amen, sisters.

Be sure to share what you think.  What a great opportunity for us all to get vulnerable and talk about our fears and what we're doing with them.

February 12, 2007

Dancing Authentic

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I think about and use the word "authentic" a lot. Lately, words that I have used unconsciously are coming to life within my cells in a new and strange way. "Authentic" used to feel like it meant to create my own self from my dreams, wishes and desires. I am feeling now that those dreams, wishes and desires are usually connected to an aspect that is not especially me, perhaps inspired by what someone else is doing with her life, or what may be striking my ultimate fancy in the moment. Today, "authentic" feels like it comes from my bones.

When we are infants, we learn to adjust. We read our parents' moods, fears and emotions. We develop a strategy for survival that often betrays our authenticity. We may protect mommy's feelings, stuff our own emotions if our parents' don't like them (especially the angries, saddies), and hide our curiosities, thereby controlling ourselves in order to please mommy and daddy and be "good". These coping strategies are essential to our survival, even moreso in homes where skins are thin and pathology is thick.

For me, a first born child, I took pleasing my parent's very seriously. I see that not every child cares to please their parents as much. And I do believe that I learned to betray my authentic self then and do still.

Here are my Do's and Don'ts for Authenticity today:

Do:
Remember the truth of where my struggles originate, this is my roadmap to healing
Take off all masks
Get angry, emotional, frustrated, sad without caring who sees
Make mistakes
Fill myself up with what my soul wants
Listen to the kind voices inside
Write for hours
Say Ouch when it hurts
Find safe people who want to see the real me
Recognize the shadow's impulses
See that what I received is easy to give
See that what I didn't receive is impossible to give without conscious awareness
Have an ugly cry when I need to
Remember that strange or out of proportion reactions are childhood talking

Don't:
Avoid feelings
Stuff feelings in
"Let go" until I'm absolutely ready
Stop feeling until I'm complete
Hide from others
Defend behavior
Overprotect the opening heart
Shame
Steal for my shadow
Take myself out of my feelings when the fear comes
Perform for love, approval or affection