Broken Corset

December 18, 2008

Scenes From an Italian Restaurant

Filed under: Agnosticism, Family, holidays, motherhood, parenting, politics, Spirituality, values — Tags: — saracallow @ 5:51 pm

Several months ago, I dined with family and friends in a little Italian restaurant in San Francisco.  It was a family run establishment, with the father roaming the restaurant singing, and his somewhat irreverent daughter managing the tables.  In my ongoing quest for spirituality, I find myself often replaying moments that seem to suggest a deeper meaning or some sort of rule to live by…. perhaps applicable outside of a specific faith or cultural environment.  And somehow, the little comments the waitress was just letting roll off her tongue – some even said sarcastically, seemed to resonate with me and my constantly re-evaluated philosophy for life.

During the course of the evening she had three little comments really hit home.  First, she said, “I don’t want to be bored.”  Amen to that, was my thought.  As a stay at home mom, I find that my life alternates between the utterly mundane (where I could scream and pull my hair out from boredom) to the completely unpredictable, unforgettable, and unimaginably wonderful.  Most of the time… life at home with little ones is a rollercoaster with the latter three twists and turns.  This is what I love about it.  There are funny, stressful, and emotional moments paired up with poignant ones where I close my eyes take a deep breath and try to savor every last drip of time.  Even the terrible moments can qualify in the time I love.  I am actually glad to be the person dealing with the stress of my children, because I love them so completely, that I trust my own reaction during those times far more than anyone else’s (that even includes my spouse!)  But interspersed with the part I love is the monotony of folding laundry, cleaning bathrooms, putting away dishes, driving the car around town, and grocery shopping.  Now every job has its ups and downs, but some of the boredom that can accompany life at home is overwhelming for me in a way that working never was.  So I really identified with her first statement.  Give me screaming, tears, laughter, hugs, or arguments any day over laundry.

The next little piece of wisdom out of our waitress’s mouth was, “I want a little of the bad.”  This could easily tie into the preference for the ups and downs over the boredom of laundry, but truthfully, I related this to excitement…. To the danger and joy I felt “cruising” in high school with the music on way too loud, to a bit of the experimentation that was part of my college experience…  spur of the moment road trips, dancing all night with virtual strangers, my belly button ring (now discarded), my contemplated tattoo, and a little bit of mary jane.  And truthfully, as my mind flashed over each moment that I bucked expectations and challenged the system a bit, I smiled.  Those were some of the best moments in my life – (pre-motherhood) – and while I have no desire to return to that risk-taking lifestyle of my late teens and early twenties, I’m certainly not sorry that I took risks during that time.   I hope that those experiences help me to retain my head when my children are teenagers – and while I don’t exactly hope they repeat all of my experiences, I guess I can appreciate that those experiences were not evil and in many ways helped me to figure out exactly who I am.  I suppose that I hope for my own children that they are able to find that “little of the bad” without sinking into a quagmire of trouble… and that as I try to keep them on the good path, I will recognize that not every step into the mud is life-threatening, career ending, or college failing – that indeed many of them teach us about our character, how to find joy in the everyday and unexpected, and how to let go of expectations sometime and just enjoy the ride.

The final little piece of wisdom out of our waitress’s mouth was, “kindness is a virtue”.  I believe that she actually was being sarcastic when she said this, mocking her father’s routine around the restaurant a bit… and truthfully, I didn’t really need her to say this one, because it is something my spouse and I have discussed many times.  With all of our questioning and uncertainty, kindness is the one value that we continually come back to.  Without a doubt, it is the number one quality we hope to teach our children.  It is not so different from the Christian “love thy neighbor as thyself” – a teaching of Jesus’ that I believe can be seen in virtually every action he takes in the Bible.  Kindness to our fellow citizen basically sums up what I expect from their behavior out in the world.  It influences my political values: Is it kind to exclude others from the institution of marriage, treat your environment poorly, deny citizenship or basic services to fellow humans based on birthplace, allow the elderly or poor to experience worse healthcare than the wealthy?  My answer is unequivocally no – and I hope that someday my children understand that kindness can be a lens through which nearly all actions can be viewed, and that they conduct themselves according to a similar value system.

It’s funny where wisdom comes from.  Being “Christmas season” – I’ve been studying and reading some of the Gospels of the Bible – trying to recognize what the good teachings are behind this holiday of excess (which is funny because I don’t really consider myself a Christian!)  But there are some really great principles in those books, and Jesus himself was a pretty phenomenal teacher…  but so too can be our fellow citizen, our waitress, the wallpaper in our house (as I’ve mentioned before.)  It’s a really great time of year to reflect on spirituality, what is meaningful, and all those tiny moments that are similar to my Italian restaurant.  As we head into this crazy season, I hope you’re able to find some time for peaceful reflection…  or even just a moment to stop and reflect on something that hits you just right amongst the chaos of carols, cookies, cards, packages, social obligations . . . .  (I know, the list can be endless!)

December 12, 2008

Great Interview of Mike Huckabee

Filed under: Uncategorized — saracallow @ 3:29 pm

If you haven’t seen this, you should.  I’m generally a Daily Show fan, but I missed this one.  Thanks to one of my facebook friends for calling it to my attention.

Who has time for Mommy Wars?

Filed under: Family, Marriage, motherhood, parenting, Uncategorized, women — saracallow @ 3:18 pm

Admittedly, I’m way behind on blog postings… and I’ve honestly had lots of inspiring little moments, all captured (as many things are in my hectic life)with green children’s marker on the back of a piece of junk mail which is buried (I hope) somewhere in my pile of important things I need to get to.  But I haven’t had any time to get to any of it.

In fact, they have stopped delivering a newspaper to my door.  Typically, this would cause me to call and report a delivery error – but I’m procrastinating because I have a fear that there is a bill for said newspapers also buried deep in my pile of important things to do, and it is not a mistake that one of my favorite indulgences is no longer in my driveway each morning.

Such is the life of a mom this time of year.  It’s a little sexist to exclude the dads… but generally speaking, I find it is us women who have volunteered to bake a couple dozen cookies for the teachers at school, cut out extra crafts for the holiday party, and bring in unused coats and food for the coat and food drive.  We are also planning to help our kids celebrate by baking extra at home, decorating the house, attending every little school performance and party, and digging up old Christmas DVDs and music.  And I haven’t even mentioned gift planning, shopping, and wrapping or addressing holiday cards. 

Wow.  And all this on top of our other responsibilities.  As I sat down at the computer and calculated how long it had been since I blogged, I thought about how all of us are in the holiday crunch this time of year.  Some of us add on the responsibilities to a very busy work day at the office, others of us, to a very busy work day at home. 

And I think about the Mommy Wars.  These “wars” are something I have never particularly understood or felt a part of.  Maybe it’s because my choice to stay at home wasn’t an easy one to make, or one that I  think I’ll stick with forever.  I know how hard those of us who work at home work, and how much personal sacrifice it entails.  And I could turn around and say the exact same thing about those moms I know who work “at work”.   

Our recent move to the Silicon Valley has been a little eye opening actually when it comes to the “mommy wars”.  Even in Los Angeles, most moms seemed to fit pretty neatly into one of the two armies at war…  but not here.  Here, a truce seems to have been called.  In the extremely progressive Bay Area, I hardly know any moms at home who don’t dabble in a professional environment too.  What a lucky position for these moms to be in.  Rather than look upon anyone working disparagingly (as the mommy war would encourage me to) – I look upon these women enviously.  Somehow, they have managed to straddle both worlds, part time in each, engaged at home on a daily basis with their children, and intellectually and professionally stimulated as well.  They aren’t the moms of our mother’s generation who worked full time and still felt the responsibility to do it all at home.  There are many of these women who have genuinely found a reasonable part time commitment to both – aided in large part by the greater flexibility and progressive stance offered by  many of the internet companies located here.  Of course, this is how I envision it.  They might describe it differently.

Nonetheless, I feel sorry for the rest of us, who have had to choose one over the other – and especially for some of us for whom the “choice” was one of necessity not options.  Being a mom isn’t easy – especially this time of year.  Making choices that somehow automatically assign you a role in some sort of war isn’t something most of us signed up for when we made our “choice”.   And who has time for such a debate anyway?  Not me.  There are too many things in  my pile waiting to get done!

This holiday season, when I’m behind on enough things already… I look upon each mom I see out there with a smile.  Being a mom is a sisterhood really, and whichever side of the war you’re on, you’re a part of it.  We’re all just trying to get it all done, and find some time to sit by the fire and celebrate the holidays with the ones we love.  It’s time for peace in the mommy wars… and there’s no better time to recognize it than this holiday season.

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