Dear Young Mom,

Yes, you, the one rushedly ushering her four children out of Mass last night before it was over.

I didn’t mean to eavesdrop.  I know you hesitated before lecturing your oldest…is she 7 or 8?  Probably getting ready for First Holy Communion, and just having made her First Penance…plus being the oldest child…she knows right from wrong and just has to correct those younger brothers, even if it does cause the meltdown you desperately wanted to avoid.

I’m that bossy woman in the vestibule who blocked your escape and made you wait for the final blessing.  I’m sorry if I overstepped my bounds.  I just thought you needed some reassurance.  When I said I know how you feel, I meant it.  Really.

Perhaps you think I have no idea.  Maybe you saw my family across the aisle during Mass.  Six, or at least five, well-behaved and reverent children who did not need their mother’s constant reminders to be quiet, pay attention, keep their hands to themselves, sit/stand/kneel.  In fact, yes, I did leave them to take the toddler out, and they still behaved properly without any adult supervision.  This is not an indictment on your parenting at all.  In fact, it should give you hope.

Eight or nine years ago, I had 4 children under the age of reason.  It was hard.  Let no one tell you otherwise.  And like you, I frequently had to attend Mass without my husband.  When one child acts up, you have to drag them all out.  I promise, I did have to drag them all out.  Often.  Their behavior last night is not due to naturally docile personalities, rather, it comes after years and years of fits and tantrums and walking in the back and hiding in the vestibule and retreating to a crying room and sometimes even leaving the building for a bit because I was sure they could be heard through several walls.  I’ve dealt with children with ears so sensitive they could not tolerate the loud music.  I’ve dealt with children coping poorly with a deployed father…and I was on the edge myself.  I’ve had 4 year olds who think since the 2 year old is getting away with it, they can do.  And 6 year olds who thought the same about the 4 year old’s antics.  I have brought food, books, and toys…and not brought food, books, and toys.  I have made the mistake of giving a toddler some item in the hopes it would make him a bit quieter only to have his sound effects in playing with the toy be louder than the original fussiness.  And I have let him play with that item anyway, knowing that the fit he will throw when I take it away will be even louder.  And at age 7, I have felt that every single one of them was not ready for Communion because they were so bad.  But something happens, perhaps the grace of the sacrament itself, and a squirmy 6 or 7 year old blossoms into a well-mannered 8 or 9 year old.  Most of the time at least.

I am now, finally, at the point where the majority of my children are older than your oldest girl.  I can take one (sometimes two) out of Mass when necessary, and leave the rest behind.  My oldest, like yours, will step in to discipline if necessary.  And if he did, that would cause problems for us, too.  But it’s not generally required.

There were many times that I did not think I would make it through Mass.  There were even a few Sunday mornings that started out so badly that I didn’t go.  I just did not have the strength.  And my sin, of course, was not so much in missing Mass as it was in thinking that I could ever have enough strength to do it.  I can’t do it – any of it – on my own.  Even last night, even arriving a few minutes late, right behind you, I took a moment to ask God for a good Mass, to get something out of it, to make it through without too much angst.  Sometimes the answer is yes.  But sometimes he sends me to the vestibule with a squirmy kid.

I know for certain that God gave me these seven kids, with all their unique faults, because I, with all my unique faults would somehow be the best thing for them.  I am also perfectly willing to believe that God gave me these special crosses to bear for the sole purpose of being right there in the vestibule last night when you needed a hug and an older mom to tell you it’s going to be all right, you can do it.  You can.  One day, sometimes just one hour at a time, with the grace of God.

One more thing: don’t ever take away a promised dinner out if they are too much during Saturday night Mass.  The person you punish most is yourself.  I hope you did drive-through as I suggested.  And I really hope you poured yourself a glass of wine when you got home.  It’s the best way to wash down that quarter pounder.

I’ll see you next week.  And in case I don’t, be sure that even if it’s from the vestibule, you stay for the final blessing: go in peace.

King George

Did you see this video with the twin newborns having a bath?  A sweet picture of sibling perfection as they remain lovingly intertwined as they must have been in the womb.

George and I watched the video together on the kindle as he sat on my lap.  Then Mary came over and climbed up to see as well.  This made George screech and push her off.  She persisted, so he switched to using his feet to keep her from watching the video.  I kept pointing to the peaceful example on the screen of how to treat one’s sibling, but he was having none of it.

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This second year of his is not the “terrible two’s” as it has been labeled.  No.  It is the “tyrannical two’s”.  As long as the tyrant is given his every desire, he is quite pleasant.

 

The trick is making him want what you want him to do.  The big kids haven’t quite figured this out yet, so they walk around saying no no no no no.

“No, George, you can’t play with that.”

“No, George, that’s my school work.”

“No, George, those are my legos.”

“No, George, that’s dangerous.”

“No, George, get off the table!”

“No, George! GEORGE! GEOOORGE!!! NOOOO!!!!”

Seriously, right now, I am listening to a big kid say “Somebody get this baby! Help me!”

No, I’m not going.

Because right now another big kid has stepped in and is suggesting, deviously, to the baby that he might want to find mommy.

And here he is.

(sigh)

Solidarity

My good friend Andrea Terry’s son, Michael, was recently diagnosed with cancer.  He has spent the last month doing chemo and has subsequently lost all his hair.  My men decided to cut their hair in a mutual fraternity of baldness.  We could only convince Peter to do 1/4″.  Billy and Fritz did 1/8″ and Bill did 0″, but it did leave a stubble.  Here are the before and after pics.

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Please pray for our friend, Michael Winston Terry.

No, we didn’t cut Georgie’s little head.

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Halloween

If you have ever been involved in a theatrical performance, ever been backstage an hour before showtime, ever experienced the insanity, the tension, the near-hysteria of drama kings and queens and princes and princesses scurrying around in various stages of undress, hunting for missing props, shouting for makeup, crying over wardrobe malfunctions, and semi-rehearsing their lines or getting into character…

…you might have some idea what what my home is like on Halloween.

George’s attitude toward the “festivities” mirrors my own.

ImageThe end result – like Katie’s costume – is the only reason I tolerate this annual event. 

I did theatre in high school, but I didn’t do costumes or props or makeup.  I did stage crew.  The set, for the most part, is completed by dress rehearsals, so all that madness in those last few minutes before curtain call were somebody else’s problem.  But now, they are mine.

This year, we teamed up with another family of 9.  We tried to do one cohesive theme, but the boys (my boys, not the other family’s boys) did not want to play along unless it was a Star Wars or Lord of the Rings theme.  Those movies have pretty limited female characters and even less female appeal.

So the girls decided to do The Wizard of Oz.  Katie was the Lion, Jenny was the Wicked Witch of the East (crushed by the house), Mary was the Tin Man and George was (supposedly) the Scarecrow.  Our friends were Dorothy, the Wicked Witch of the West, Glinda the Good Witch, and 2 munchkins.

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The older boys made their own armor using The Knight Book from Warfare by Duct Tape.  My boys love these books (they own three). 

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And then, Round Two, we had Mass and an All Saint’s Day party this morning.  One child was not in the mood to dress up and another child is now too old for it (not for Halloween, but for All Saint’s Day, of course).  But we had 5 saints: George, Martin, Agnes, Rose of Lima, and Camillus de Lellis (I don’t know him either).

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These saint costumes are all 10 minute costumes using things we already have and safety pins.  That black scarf over Katie’s head is a skirt…the white fabric is scrap fabric.

Maybe some day we’ll do Halloween like that – 10 minute saint costumes and done.  But since they’re already making plans for next year, I doubt that will happen soon.

George: 14 months plus

Just a bunch of pictures of my little guy who is growing up way too fast.

Thinking…

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Smiling…

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Getting caught…

 

 

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The poor dog…

 

 

 

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Poor us…he’s standing on things on which he shouldn’t be standing…

 

 

 

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…like things that roll…

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Laughing…

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Running…

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Loving life.

 

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Listening to an iPod.

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Where does the time go?