Category Archives: family

Making Memories

There’s nothing quite like an accident to snap life into focus.

For the past 6 months, as I’ve focused on my writing career, I’ve barely had time to shop for groceries. This isn’t a complaint. Although we’ve run out of milk twice, I’m happily, ecstatically, writing and have met a slew of wonderful writer friends whose works I relish as I read them in print and online. But there’s a trade-off to everything and in the short-term my trade off is leisure time. Last fall, when my writing class instructor, Meagan Francis, asked all of us, “What are you willing to give up to find time to write?” we all laughingly agreed that we were willing to give up cleaning the house. But her question was important because it helped us understand that you really can’t do it all. When you add a writing career, something else stops. So if you notice that we run out of bread or that I’m not caught up on the latest TV show or even that I’m not running on Wednesday mornings, it’s okay. I’m figuring out how to make this all work, and in the long run, we’ll have bread. Really, we will.

All this to say that when my 9-year-old took a head-first 5-foot fall into a large boulder at a park last weekend, I suddenly had time. I had time to calm him down. To re-assure my other kids that he’d be fine. I had 6 hours to spend in the ER, watching them do x-rays on my little boy’s jaw, wrist and elbow. Watching him lay on a gurney as he slid in and out of the cat scan machine. I had lots of time to text my husband, away on business, with updates and to wait for the doctors to re-assure us that our boy would be fine.

And he is fine. He’s banged up but good, has a broken (permanent!) front tooth, and might not be climbing over any railings in the near future, but a little Dermabond here, and a little Bacitracin there, and he’ll be as good as new. Okay, he’ll need a little dental work, too, but these are very minor things. Very. Minor. Things.

He doesn’t remember falling. In the moments after the accident, my poor little guy kept looking at the blood, which seemed to be everywhere, and asking, “What happened?” After we explained, he asked again, and, a few minutes later, again. None of his potential injuries was as scary as that—as not knowing how hard he hit his head and what that meant.

In the hours that followed, I re-scheduling carpools, lunch and cancelled appointments for the following day. Because of the concussion, he wasn’t allowed to read or watch TV for 24 hours. So I read to him. We went to the car wash. We visited the dentist. I bought him a milkshake. We did nothing but spend the day together. As I look back on that day the edges are blurry but my son, in the center, is in sharp focus. He’s fine.

And just like that I realized that it doesn’t matter if we run out of milk or bread. It only matters that we use the time we have to love and learn and grow. My kids know that I like to play games with them and take them to new places. But do they know why? Do they know that every hour we spent playing Rumikube together is an hour that I get to know them more? That every trip we take helps me to see them grow in so many ways—in how they interact with each other and with strangers? In how they incorporate the knowledge of this new place into their very being? Do they understand that I only get them with me for a short time, and that’s if I’m lucky?

They don’t, but I do. I understand that the memories we’re creating right now are the ones that will last me a lifetime, the ones I’ll recall when they graduate college or stand at the alter, or when they hold their first child. These are the memories of my life with them. So while I’m willing to let the house get messy, to run out of essential goods every now and then, and to skip my favorite television show, I’m not willing to forgo downtime with my family. More than ever, I’m making time for the memories. And I’m eternally thankful that my little boy is fine and that we have lots more memories to make together.

Brotherly Love

Re: my socks & brother’s whole outfit.
Please note that this was the 70s.

My little brother and I haven’t always gotten along.

There was the time, for instance, in elementary school, when someone ripped a whole in the fabric below the top bunk bed.  My mother, having had enough of our antics of late, confronted us at breakfast.
 Who did this? she demanded.  No one leaves for school until one of you fesses up.
We scurried off to solve this fresh dilemma.  Sequestered in his bedroom, we debated what to do.  I was furious and desperate not to be late. “Tell her,” I hissed.  “Tell her you did it or we’ll be late for school.”
We tromped back into the kitchen, slowly, one after the other, and my 8-year old brother confessed.
But why, asked my mom.  Why did you do it?
I didn’t really do it, he claimed, head down.  I just don’t want to be late for school.
His recant didn’t help.  And naturally, I didn’t forgive the grievance for quite some time.
But, more often than not, we were friends.  When the movers came, as they did every three years, and packed up the boxes with our treasured belongings, it was my brother who stayed by my side.  When we climbed into the old Honda or Lincoln Convertible (sweet ride, I know!), and pointed the car north, or south, to the next military base, it was my brother giggling with me in the backseat, speculating whether the new base would have a nice swimming pool, and wondering how we’d find new friends. 
The smell of the wrapping materials and cardboard boxes stays with me; if I close my eyes, I can conjure it in seconds.  In a new place, the empty rooms echo for awhile, until bit by bit you fill them with tiny pieces of your soul, little slivers of you that say I live here now, this is my home.  The room softens.  In the midst of the Madonna posters, piles of clothes, and algebra homework I made my way towards new friends and new memories, until we moved again.
And always, my brother was with me.
He lives 1,200 miles away now, but it doesn’t really matter.  The threads are woven, the bonds are strong.  If I need him, I can count on him to be there.


What about my own boys?  If they live far away—or even nearby one another—I wonder if they will share this type of bond.  How about you?  Do you share a bond with a sibling?  Do you think your kids will?

Set Boundaries and Have a Merry Christmas

credit: mrskyce

Does the dread of family gatherings creep in and spoil your anticipation at this beautiful time of year?

Read my post over at Blissfully Domestic for 3 ideas on setting boundaries so you can enjoy the holidays!  Last month, I wrote about handling family gatherings with difficult family members–feel free to take a peek at that one too, if it might help.

Consider them my gift to you.  🙂

Merry Christmas!