Monday, October 4, 2010

Beach Round 2













Ahh, the beach. Now that it is rounding November, I guess I'll take ya'll back to July. We were very fortunate to have been offered a great beach place for a few days by Eli's daddio. So on a Sunday night after the offer was made we so graciously (and furiously) packed two children, ourselves, all of Greg's work stuff and all of our beach crap into the car to head out the next day.

Greg had a few claims that needed to be handled kind of on the way....So, off we go. The first claim went fine. It took a little longer then expected by nothing crazy. Then the second claim was kind of disasterous. We got off on the wrong exit, which then we had to drive 16 miles in the wrong direction b/c there were no other exits! HA! Then Sam needed to get out of the car. Thank God the woman whose house it was actually babysat kids and had a small gathering of children Sam's age penned up in her backyard! So off he went!

So our beach trip that should take just around 3 hours ended up taking 7+ hours. Good thing we had a book on tape! The house was PERFECT. It was certainly kid friendly and not so new you felt like you couldn't touch anything, but not so old that you felt gross by touching anything! Again, it was perfect. It felt like home! The kids acclimated well and had a blast. Greg worked in the early mornings so he could enjoy the day with the fam. By the time we were fed, dressed and packed he was ready to go.

So off to the beach we went...

Saturday, October 2, 2010

Effortless Parenting

SFD. Why does being a parent have to be so damn hard? I love my children and anyone who knows me knows that they are the light of my life, so in an effort to stop complaining about them and start truly enjoying them, I'll let someone else do the talking.

Here is a friends blog about effortless parenting....

Friday, September 24, 2010

after 7.5 years of wandering through the wondrous maze of parenting and reading the first chapter or so of half a dozen parenting books, i feel i've finally arrived at becoming the guardian, disciplinarian, and loving, encouraging, wise parent wanna-be that i am. yep, you heard that right. still stink at this.

sometimes i have parenting epiphanies while i'm leaning over my dirty bathroom sink applying my wrinkle cream and under-eye-circle makeup in the morning, getting ready for another busy day, and i can hear daddy through the wall negotiating with paige. she'll inevitably walk into the bathroom a few minutes later holding a hot pink ribbed tank top with "sweetness" stitched on the front and a bright red frilly skirt and ask me if it matches. i tell her no it doesn't match and she moans and complains all the way back to her room and then joe comes into the bathroom a minute later and says in a frustrated daddy voice: "why won't she do what she's told?" and i say, in my wise mom-voice: "because she doesn't get any consequences. why would she?" joe's response led to this morning's epiphany: because she's supposed to. (if i had a dime for every time he said that to me...)

i've gotta hand it to that ever-loved generation that came before us, who made parenting seem a normal part of life (oh, but it is not), begged us for grandchildren, and never bothered to tell us the one BIG SECRET. they made the "supposed to" happen when we were children with their consistent authority on the back end, and we learned early that we better do what we were "supposed to", or else. period.

problem is, in raising us, you parents made our lives so wonderful and easy (possibly because yours was so hard, and you love us so much) that we never thought parenting would require SUCH effort--and we're kinda lazy. we don't want to do that back-end authority work, because it's HARD. and since WE were good kids, we thought that's just the way we were. what we didn't realize was that you parents worked VERY HARD to make us good. and you made it seem effortless--whether consciously or not, we didn't know the inner workings of your parenting efforts. you disciplined us--and not listening was not an option. what to eat or wear was not really negotiable. and, most importantly--as dad, who parents cliff huxtable-style, once said to me, "you gotta make them think you could hurt them, even though you never would"--instill the terror. so along comes me and joe with the baby carriage, all innocently minding our own business, thinking we can provide these cute creatures with what is essential to life: food, shelter, clothing… then sit back and relax while they turn into respectful, contributing members of society without raising our blood pressure one point. but, as you all know, this doesn't work, because children are WILD ANIMALS who, by nature, are disobedient and naughty, 100% of the time.

so... a few minutes ago, that naughty girl went to school with a hot pink shirt with a lie stitched on it, a red skirt, and beat up white sneakers, and i told her she looked beautiful. but i'm preparing for the important battles, and she's not gonna win :)