Saturday, November 26, 2011

New Traditions

We had a wonderful Thanksgiving. All of our children, their spouses, fiancĂ©’s and our grand gifts were in attendance at Camp. Way too much food, a great deal of laughter, a lot of football, a bit of hunting and fishing for the guys, a bit of shopping for the girls and the antics of a two and a four year-old made for a boisterous good time. There was a little nostalgia for holidays past. This was my first holiday away from my parents – ever. I am so fortunate to still have both of my parents; it really was quite difficult for me to miss sharing even one special occasion with them.
Also, our son-in-law-to-be was celebrating without his family for the first time. I am sure it was hard for him, even though he was gentleman enough not to let me see it. All of us understand with our minds that the passing of time brings with it necessary changes to long-held traditions. But our hearts stage a grand rebellion and we want to cling to what is familiar and what has always made us happy. Change needs to sneak up on you, and catch you by surprise so that you are suddenly flooded with the realization that the change has already happened, and that you are so grateful that it was just fine after all. 
Best new tradition:  Everybody went to the Christmas tree farm and chose a NC mountain-grown tree to take back to Eastern NC for Christmas. Santa was definitely on-site to insure that all wishes went straight into his ear and therefore his memory. After all, Santa forgets nothing. 
Next best new tradition:  The arrival of the Elf on the Shelf named (by the grand gifts) Fred. The children found Fred in various dioramas throughout the house each morning after much planning, staging and giggling by the resident elves. The idea being that Fred flew to the North Pole to update Santa on everyone’s behavior and then flew home to have an adventure of his own each night. He had a date with Tinkerbell. He wore pink pajamas and had a sleepover with a baby doll. He ate popcorn while hanging upside down in the popper. He got stuck in a birdhouse. He even went fishing in the toilet tank.
   


We also got the giggles sending personalized video messages from Santa to each other. Highly recommended website for the entertainment of all elves and the amazement of all young children:  Portable North Pole (portablenorthpole.tv).  Fill in the blanks and Santa will send your child (or grown-up friend or significant other) an email directed very specifically to them. 
Did anybody else start a new tradition this Thanksgiving?

Sunday, November 20, 2011

Walking off Thanksgiving

I’ve been thinking about “Ernie” lately. When the kids were growing up, I drove them everywhere. To and from school, to after-school activities and field trips, to weekend sporting events, overnights, etc.  You name it, I was the driver. First of all, I was more than a bit paranoid about who they rode with.
And secondly, I learned early on that kids in the two backseats of a big old Suburban forget that there is an adult driving the car. Suddenly you became invisible and totally deaf. You just weren’t in the car. It was fabulous – one of my best mom tricks. Because once they forgot you were there and as long as you didn’t open your mouth, they started talking. About everything under the sun. Boys, girls, boys and girls together, teachers, principals and coaches, sex, alcohol, and drugs. Good ways to get around your parents’ rules and curfews – what worked on what parents. Who snuck out on Saturday night. You know – the good stuff. The more kids in the car, the better. I was the best informed mom in town. It also helped that I might have been the only mom in the neighborhood who provided “travel snacks” and was always good for a trip to the Donut Shop. Much to my husband’s dismay these goodies were always eaten in the car.  Many kids, much food and a moving car make for quite a mess over time. I didn’t care then and I still don’t clean cars. Just ask him!!
Travel with them long enough, keep your mouth shut long enough, and they eventually start talking about real life, grown-up stuff. “We need to cheer Mary up. Her Mom just got diagnosed with breast cancer. I’ll call her tonight. You ask her to spend the night on Friday.” “Sam got cut from the baseball team. Want to go with him to try out for American Legion ball so we can still play together?” “We’re doing Samaritan’s Purse stuff at EYC Sunday, want to come?” “If you had to vote in this election who would you vote for? Really? Tell me why.” And so on. Issue after issue would come up and sometimes the conversations would pick up again on the next carpool trip. That’s how I found out about “Ernie”.
Riding through the neighborhood one hot, hot summer day on our way to the pool, one of the girls pointed out a young black man, maybe in his late twenties, walking down the side of the road with way too many clothes on for such a hot day. She commented that she had noticed him walking around the neighborhood a lot and wondered where he was going. The consensus of the group was that he must be walking to and from work.
A couple days later, as we headed to an evening baseball game, we spotted the young man walking again, only in the other direction. The kids again contemplated where he had been and where he was going. This happened over and over for many weeks. Come fall, the kids had named him “Ernie” and we discovered that his path was pretty consistent. After winning a fall soccer game, I took the group to a fast food spot for a celebratory dinner. There was “Ernie” working in the kitchen. We found “Ernie” working in several fast food spots over the next year or so. The kids got so they noticed when he was missing from his regular route and wondered if he was sick or had moved away. Then several days later, “Ernie” would be back where we expected to see him and all was well again. 
Riding home one afternoon, we spotted “Ernie” trudging down the road in the pouring rain with no raincoat and no umbrella. He was drenched. The kid noise took on a new rumble, and soon, my daughter’s voice rose above the usual cacophony. “Mom, we all have umbrellas in this car. Is one of Dad’s raincoats in here somewhere?” I replied, “You have got to be kidding, Dad thinks this car is a dumpster. Do you really think he’d leave anything he cared about in here?” “Well, then just turn around and go offer “Ernie” a ride or give him an umbrella.” As my mind clicked, “Yes, thanks be to God, she did listen!” I turned the car around. We stopped beside “Ernie”. I got out of the car, introduced myself and offered him a ride. He appeared to be really frightened, like a child who had done something wrong and knew he was in trouble. As I spoke to him, I realized that he probably fell somewhere on the autism spectrum. As he sort of cowered and refused the offer of a ride, I handed him an umbrella that one of the kids proffered through the window. He tried to give it back. I told him that the children in the car wanted him to have it. That it would hurt their feelings if he refused. He nodded and took the umbrella.  As I climbed inside the car, the children expressed their upset that “Ernie” had to keep walking in the rain. I tried to explain that “Ernie” had some communication difficulties and that he was trying to follow the rules, much as they had “stranger rules” to follow. That it was hard for him to take the umbrella.  They seemed to understand that – although there was a bit of conversation about the fact that they didn’t know “grown-ups” had stranger rules, too. This thought sort of disturbed them even as it comforted them.
Years passed. The kids grew up, went to college, got jobs, got advanced degrees, got married and had children. Twenty-five years later, the girls and I were pushing a stroller full of my first granddaughter as we walked off Thanksgiving lunch, when they spotted “Ernie” on the same beaten path. They were amazed that he was still around. I commented, “Well, you are still around, aren’t you?” They asked, “Is he really still marching the same path every day?” “Yes,” I replied. “His world has changed little even though your lives have moved to different places his is sort of stuck in time.” “That’s not such a bad thing,” they said simultaneously. “They were really happy days.” This mother’s heart soared.
I actually saw "Ernie" today marching on the same path.  His hair is gray now and he walks a bit slower, but he seems to be his same old self.  It was strangely comforting.
Can you capture a moment in time when you did a mental break dance because your children proved to you that they really did “get” it?  

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Thanksgiving

Thanksgiving is really my favorite holiday. Get together with friends and family, eat, drink and give thanks. What's not to like? Perhaps just the thought of too many people in a too-small place is your challenge. Perhaps timing the cooking of 16 different dishes at four different temperatures for 16 different amounts of time in one oven is just too much to contemplate. Or maybe Aunt Sarah's and Great Aunt Mary's annual "Who made the best pie contest" has gotten as old as they have. Then there are the toddlers with picky appetites whose nap times must be worked around. Or there may be that gluten-intolerant, nut or shellfish allergic, vegetarian whose food issues must be dealt with.

And there is always, always happy noise echoing off of every wall and shouts of chaotic bedlam that come with multi-generational family life. You could be trying to cope with family circumstances that are challenging or filled with grief. You might be alone. But for me, this holiday is worth every ounce of it. Every hour in the kitchen, every hour cleaning the house, every hour airing bedrooms long unused, every sound and every smell. (Even the year we carved the turkey on a cutting board that had been sprayed accidentally with bitter orange spray I’d been using to train a puppy not to chew everything in the house.) Because getting together with friends and family to eat, drink and give thanks is my favorite thing to do.

It's my opportunity to make sure that at least once a year I very intentionally say thank you to my friends for choosing to walk this life with me. To say thank you to my family because even though they really didn't get to choose me, they did choose to love me and share their daily lives with me. To celebrate births, engagements, marriages, firsts and lasts. To commiserate with the sad or lonely and to grieve with the grieving. To say thank you to God for the fullness of my life. And to say thank you for His presence here. What are you thankful for this Thanksgiving?

Thanksgiving Menu 2011

Roast Turkey with Gaga's bread stuffing
Tav's Grilled Turkey, chopped with bbq sauce
Honey Baked Ham
Gluten free stuffing
Vegetarian stuffing
Turkey Gravy - gluten free
Mushroom Gravy - vegetarian
Green beans (cut on the bias for Gramps)
Mashed Potatoes
Fresh Sauerkraut (we are of German descent)
Vegetable Stuffed Butternut Squash - Vegetarian Entree
Aunt Ella's Baked Apples and Cranberries with Oatmeal Brown Sugar Topping (no nuts, no gluten)
Cranberry Sauce (jellied, straight out of the can and lots of it)
Sister Shubert's rolls
Gluten free rolls
Chocolate Pie - nut free/gluten free
Pecan Pie
Ice cream & whipped cream ( the real thing is gluten free)

I hope your Thanksgiving is a joy-filled celebration.