About Me

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Former educator and current wife, mom, daughter, and friend. Really, I'm just a southern girl trying to live the happiest, healthiest life I can. I do it with the help of those who know me best and love me anyway - God, my family, and my friends.

Saturday, September 13, 2014

Boobs and A Box of Chocolates


I got an interesting tip from the counselor at my children’s school several years ago.  She’s a genius, and let’s face it, my kids could use a little genius in their lives, cuz they sure ain’t gettin’ it from me.  I often wish this counselor could just take my kids home and raise them for me, delivering well-adjusted, college educated, happy, normal contributing members of society back to me in a couple decades.

Anyway, the tip she gave me had to do with carpooling.

Carpooling can be an enormous blessing in our lives as parents.  How many times have you had to pick up one child in one location and another child in a different location at the exact same time?  It happens every Tuesday afternoon at our house.  Sewing class and cross-country practice both end at 5:00 pm.  There is only one of me and two places to be and sadly, no carpool to be had.  So, the older kid waits.  He’s hot and sweaty and tired and thirsty and he wants desperately to get home and finish his homework because that’s the kind of kid he is, and he has to stand around waiting for his ride.  Meanwhile, little sister’s chauffeur shows up right on time, and she hops in the back seat bragging about the new scrunchie she made without missing a beat.  Trust me, if there was a carpool option that would help our Tuesday 5:00 situation, I would absolutely use it. 

I have a carpool for Libby’s gymnastics practices that is truly a lifesaver.  It helps everyone in our family and I’m grateful for the women involved.  I wouldn’t give up our gymnastics carpool for anything less than a pro-bono limo driver, and I’ve yet to meet one.  Still, I understand why the genius counselor provided the advice she did, which was this . . .

“You should only use carpools when absolutely necessary, because a lot of really important conversations you can have with your kids are likely to take place in the car.”

Why the car? you ask.

It’s simple.  Because research has shown kids are more likely to discuss serious topics when they don’t have to make eye contact with you AND aren’t threatened by the reaction you might have (since you’re supposed to be preoccupied with the gas pedals and steering wheel and Atlanta’s rush hour traffic).  It makes perfect sense, doesn’t it?  And I believe that genius counselor, because I had this extremely important and very enlightening conversation last week in the car with my recently turned nine (but thinks she’s closer to thirteen) daughter:

Lib: Mom, lots of girls on the teams at the gym have sports bras.  When can I get a sports bra to wear under my gymnastics leotard?

Me: Uhhhh (thinking fast about the best way to answer this question without A, hurting my child’s pre-pubescent feelings and B, making sure my child knows she’s flat-out nuts if she thinks I’m buying her a bra anytime soon) . . . I’ll be happy to get you one just as soon as you need it, honey.

Lib:  When will that be?

Me:  Uhhhh (concentrating hard so as not to make any statements my child can later turn into things I “absolutely promised,” as she has been known to do in the past, and keeping my tone as matter-of-fact as possible in the hopes that she will feel comfortable having this kind of conversation with me again in the future) . . . When you get breast buds.

Lib: (without attempting to hide the disgust in her voice) . . . Breast buds?  What in the world are breast buds?

Me: (starting to sweat a little thinking about where this conversation could go from here) . . . Remember how we’ve talked about the way God decides when boys and girls go through puberty and start growing into men and women, and how many things change in your bodies when you go through puberty?

Lib: (with large amounts of skepticism) . . . Yeaaaaaaaa.

Me: (gaining confidence in my parenting abilities by the second) . . . Well, one of the things that changes for girls is they begin to grow breasts.  Breast buds are the beginning of those breasts, and they are a sign that a girl is going through puberty.

Lib: (less disgusted and more intrigued) . . .When will I get breast buds?

Me: (thankful the conversation is surely about to end and wondering when my parent-of-the-year award will arrive in the mail) . . . Only God knows that, honey.

Lib:  So, when did you get breast buds?

Me: (wondering why this conversation didn’t end as expected) . . . Oh, I was pretty late to start going through puberty.  And actually (deciding to insert a joke here might not have been my best move), I’m not so sure my breast buds ever really turned into breasts, like most people’s do (come on, that’s funny if you know me and my size nearly A’s).

Lib: (not laughing and possibly close to tears):  But . . . I don’t want my breasts to be like yours. 

I want BIG ones.

?

!

?

!

I could tell you the rest of the conversation – there was some frightening ridiculousness that dribbled out of my mouth unexpectedly about a box of chocolates and how you never know what you’re gonna get and only the Lord knows the plans He has for you and maybe you’ll be more like your grandmothers or great-grandmothers or the people who can shop at Victoria’s Secret and buy real bras instead of training bras and it was all VERY. VERY. BAD.  I’m still trying to figure out why I felt the need to connect Forrest Gump and God during this intimate conversation with my daughter about boobs, but that’s what I did.

So carpool away my friends – we’re all doing the best we can and sometimes the best means another person drives your children - but make sure you still have some one-on-one time with your kids in the car on occasion, because it’s true . . . in life, you never know what you’re gonna get.  And if you’re lucky, one day, you might just get your daughter sharing her BIG dreams with you from the back seat.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Thirteen Years Later


We all remember and we always will.  Those decade old feelings of complete shock and overwhelming sadness resurface this time each year, and we picture the planes exploding and the buildings disappearing and the people . . . the people covered in ash and grime . . . the people clothed in confusion . . . the people just like you and me, people who might have been our coworkers or neighbors or friends, stumbling around in despair through a city they no longer recognized.   

It seems different this year.  The fear isn’t only a distant memory today.  We aren’t simply honoring the fallen and the heroes of that horrible morning on this anniversary of September 11, 2001.  This year, we’re dealing with real concern for what it all means now.  Because the people who flew those planes into our buildings and our dreams?  They are alive and well, my friends, and they claim their job isn’t finished.  They live and breathe in lands not so far away, and their single greatest goal is to destroy the hopes and hearts of Americans.

I don’t have a clue when it comes to foreign policy and national security and the politics of waging war on hatred.  I don’t have any answers.  But I have a God who is truth and I believe every word he says.  And my God says this . . .

Overcome evil with good.  Romans 17:21.

Our response to hatred should mirror his.  We can hate the evil as much as he does, but we cannot hate the people. 

I am going to pray for our country today.  For the leaders making the decisions, for the brave risking their lives on my behalf, for the citizens everywhere who, today, are remembering, crying, worrying.

And I’m going to pray for our enemies. 

Because God tells me to. 

Because hatred never solved anything. 

Because I believe that in the end, good will overcome all evil.