Seven(ty) year itch…

My mother recently turned 70.  Since there is 30 years difference between she and I we both enter a new decade during the same year.  When I asked her how it felt to be 70 she replied, “It’s strange.  I just don’t FEEL 70.”  And I get that…because I can honestly say that when I think about the fact that I’m turning 40 this year, the same thought goes through my head.  “I just don’t FEEL 40.”  Similarly, my 8-year-old daughter, Laney, was recently looking at the baby and said…”It makes me feel weird to think I was that little once.”

Her comment made me laugh at the time but I think it’s the same emotion my mother was describing.   It’s weird that the souls that inhabit my children’s bodies are constant, for lack of a better word.  Life’s experiences will shape them and their personalities, but a day will come, more quickly than any of us can fathom, that they will sit in a room surrounded by their children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren and say…”it’s strange…I just don’t FEEL 70.”

Personally, I think this fact takes some of the proverbial heat off of this parenting ride.  I mean, if they “are who they are,” isn’t it just our job to present them with as much positive life experience as we can, shield them from harm and then just observe how that person takes on a new role with their growing bodies?  Wouldn’t our stress be so much less if we could just release the idea that we somehow “control” the human outcome?

Of course I’m not talking about the effect of abuse or neglect and what that can do to the human spirit…that’s the extreme.  I’m more referencing the fact that even though Avery, my nine year old, loves horses and wants to take horseback riding lessons, waiting a year isn’t going to drastically alter the course of her life.  Even though her blue eyes can fill with tears to the PERFECT amount so that the fluid fills to very edge of the lower eyelids.  Even though that when I tell her that driving 30 minutes with a newborn to take her to horseback riding lessons isn’t happening this year, those same eyes have the ability to allow a single, perfectly shaped tear to spill over and ever so dramatically trickle down her cheek in academy award winning style.   If her inner person is behind those eyes just watching this whole thing play out, I don’t have to add a check mark to the “reasons my kids will need therapy” list that I keep in my head as she turns and walks away, shoulders slumped, murmuring about how hard it is to be the oldest child.

At times like that, I just need to reassure myself that I’m doing the best I can…and hope that someday she looks back and knows that.  Or…I need to smile and know that someday, she’ll look into the eyes of her child and have to say something disappointing to them and hope she remembers that she can’t control it all but that they will be just fine.

Life happens, the years pass and birthdays continue to surprise us with the numbers that accompany them despite their predictability.  I imagine that’s why 70 doesn’t have a “feel”…it’s too similar to all the decades that have passed before it.

yada yada yada

I felt the title was necessary to make light of my absence for the past few months.  We had a baby!  A beautiful, gorgeous, magnificent baby!  It’s like the Seinfeld episode where the woman is telling a story and then seems to jump past all the important parts with…”and then yada yada yada” and jumps to the present tense.  Although, what is there to say?  I gave birth, and yes, there are funny parts and personal parts and even a little scary side to it but that’s not what this is about so I think yada yada yada sums it up.

The short of it is SHE’S HERE!  And she’s taught me so much in the two short months I’ve spent getting to know her.  First of all, either she’s a REALLY good baby or I’ve approached parenting differently this time.  I think it’s somewhere in the middle…a little of both.  She’s a pretty chill kid and I’m not all bent out of shape about everything being perfect…or perhaps I don’t have a need for the drama that I did with my older girls.  A need to play out the stress that everyone loves to talk about with a new baby.  Oh, not that I don’t acknowledge the stress, it’s real and it can be intense, but it doesn’t have to take over.  It can just make you drink an extra glass of wine at the end of the day and be thankful that your survived.  I’m pretty sure I tried to play out some sit-com interpretation of new mommy hood the first two times by pulling my hair out at any little detour from my plan.  This time my “plans” are more like suggestions for the day that may or may not get accomplished.  Sometimes a list that reads…

1. finish laundry

2. write thank you cards

3. make dinner

4. work out

5. start baby photo book

becomes…

1.  Get big kids ready for school, crawl back in bed and cuddle with your new baby and then spend approximately seven hours staring at her and wonder how you got so.damn.lucky.

2. Pick up big kids from school.

Now, I gladly admit that there are days I do feel significantly more productive and accomplish great things in those seven hours, but somedays the second list just fits the bill.  I never realized until she arrived that I didn’t feel quite complete as a family.  I loved having my two girls close in age and the four of us had such fun together–it never occurred to me that there was anything missing.  Last weekend though, we took a little weekend staycation to Kansas City to stay in a hotel and just swim and spend time as a family out of the house.  As we were walking around the Plaza together I felt a “wholeness” I’d never felt before.  Kind of like a deep breath that feels so good.  My husband on one side, a snoozing baby strapped to my chest in a carrier and my older girls walking in front of us being silly.  One of those God-whisper moments that just said “FAMILY” to me in a way that felt amazing.