Small Successes: Kids Edition

My children have had some successes this week. They're not my successes; they are absolutely theirs, but I can't think of much else besides them right now, so I think I'll just tag along.

One

Michael was named a captain of George Mason University's soccer team this week. This is a tribute to his hard work and determination. Not my success, but I did drive to a few practices along the way...

Two

Nicholas overcame his shyness and joined two of his teammates to run a lemonade stand after his practice, while Stephen and the other boys' brothers had their training sessions. They raised about $80 for Red Rose school in Kibera. Not my success, but I did provide some capital.

Three

Karoline made a new friend in the darling little girl who moved into Mallory's house. Not my success, but I did break the ice with a homecooked meal and cookies on their first night in their new home.

Let's encourage one another and build each other up. Celebrate your successes at Faith and Family Live!

Kitchen

Once I told someone that if this homeschooling mom gig didn't work out, I'd love to have a cooking show. I like to cook. I like the art and the science of making food taste good and look beautiful. I like messing with presentation. I like to put plates in front of my family that make them slow down and savor the moment. Maybe it's genetic. I come from a long line of Italian cooks who respect the beautiful.

She scoffed. Scoffed! She actually said that food was just something to make, eat, and clear out of the way. She said she couldn't be bothered with thinking too much about it. She had a big family to feed and it was sinful somehow to give food more than its utilitarian thought.

I gulped. Didn't talk to her about food again.

Last year, I relinquished my inner foodie. First, I acknowledged that it didn't play well with all-day-long morning sickness. Then, it didn't hold up to the admonition not to be on my feet more than necessary. Then, it died altogether when I was banished from the kitchen and sent upstairs for 6 weeks of bedrest. After the baby was born, I couldn't really multi-task the premature baby nurturing and tasks that required--well--my hands.

We didn't starve. Remember, the foodie thing is genetic. Almost all of my children appear to have inherited the gene. The jury is still out on the one who puts hot sauce on everything. They COOK, these kids. And they care about presentation. The eight-year-old is particularly fond of finding just the right garnish. His current hero bakes cakes. (Apparently the creative kitchen gene is alive and well in that family, too.)

Now, though, I'm back in the kitchen. I choose menus that are a bit more involved than I probably should. I stand at the counter and do quite a bit of peeling and chopping. I am certain to make a mess as I go. I can almost hear my utilitarian commenter clicking her tongue and telling me that there is no place for creativity in the kitchen, that it's a waste of time and energy. No matter. I find loving, thoughtful creativity has much the same effect in the kitchen as it does in the schoolroom. Joy in the beautiful process is contagious and it draws us all in.

I'm not in the kitchen alone. Ever. The creative process and the creative product draw my children to me. They want to help. They see the joy that cooking brings and the want to be a part of it. And there we are, busy creating, when something else happens. They start to talk. Big ones. Little ones. They instinctively know that that recipe with all those steps will hold me here in this sunny yellow room. I will not leave. I will not turn away. I will listen. And they can be assured that I will hear the subtle seasoning in their stories. I will be attuned to the questions they hope to be asked. I will the mom in the apron who knows that it's not about the white sauce at all. It's about the inevitable conversation that happens around good food. It happens at the table, of course. We eat as a family and never are at a loss for words. But the intimate conversation, the sharing of hearts, happens over nearly-bubbling milk, whisk in hand.

I take the time to consider food. To consider cost. To consider skills. To consider time. To consider cleanup. And I decide again and again to choose the thoughtful, creative approach. Because, really, there are so many ways our children need to be nourished. Food is just the beginning.

Daybook: College bound edition

***
Outside My Window ...
The sun is setting and the world's aglow.

***
I am listening to...
children cleaning the kitchen.
 
***

To Live the Liturgy...

I'm hoping to spend some time at Adoration.
***

To Fit and Happy...

no progress here. This week's goal is to not let the scale dictate my mood. 

***
I am thankful for...

the health and strength and resources to host a big crew of soccer players last week

the witness of a devoted mother for whom we grieved last week

a brand new GMU hoody and the sentiment behind it~romance is alive and well here;-)

~
  ***

I am pondering ...

Stephanie's strength:

There is in every true woman's heart a spark of heavenly fire,
which lies dormant in the broad daylight of prosperity; but which
kindles up and beams and blazes in the dark hour of adversity.

-Washington Irving

God Bless Her!

***

From the kitchen ...

I cooked and cooked and cooked some more for all those hungry soccer players last week. It was a joy to see them eat and an even greater joy to sit and talk with them over meals. They are fine young men and it was my pleasure to get to know them.

Boy, does the kitchen feel empty now.

And sad.

***

DSC_0006

I am wearing ...

A pair of shorts and one of Michael's rejected spare T-shirts . Bare feet and hair clip. And lip gloss.

***
I am creating ...
Daily lesson plans and master schedules for activities. Dear Lord, please help me because I so am not enjoying my iCal sessions lately. 
 
   ***
  On my iPod...
Joy for the Asking; Joy for the Keeping, a gem from Family Centered Press.
***
Towards a real eduction ...

We're binge reading and not much else this week as I juggle ridiculous soccer camp schedules. 

I'm bringing my spiral bound planners with me to try to pencil things in for when soccer slows and "school" starts.

***

DSC_0017

I am thinking... 

how wrong I was when I thought that it would be easier to see Michael leave for school this year. We've done this twice already. It wasn't. Nope. Not easier at all.

Hold them close. Hug them tightly. The days just get faster and time moves ever more quickly.

***

In the Garden...
It's time to harvest basil and make lots of pesto for the freezer.

 Around the House

I think that Michael has a secret strategy for strewing clothes and clutter all over the house with ferocity the last couple of weeks before he leaves for school, in the hopes that I'll be so annoyed that I can't wait to get him out of the house and I'll toss his stuff after him. It almost worked. But not quite.

Still, it is cleaner around here tonight.

.***

Sarah Anne this week...

Sigh. She finally warmed up to Michael and was reaching for him in the last few days before he left. He's big and strong and tosses and "airplanes" her and she just giggles and giggles. They're buddies.

I hope she remembers him.


***
I am reading  ...

A letter from my former pastor in the bulletin this week. It's a keeper and, as usual, he's making me think. I'm reminded what an extraordinarily good priest he is and that I really should write and tell him so.

And I'm re-reading a post from this time last year. It's that week again, where I'm forced away from the computer because of soccer camps. I need to re-commit to these online principles and this week will force me to do that anyway.

***
I am hoping and praying ...
for the Snow family, the Barrett family, and the Cushman family. May they be consoled by family and friends, saints and angels, and the good Lord himself.
***
 
On Keeping Home ...

I wish that I could just sit back and feel good about the progress I make some days, instead of always noticing all the things yet to be done.

I wish.

***
One of my favorite things ...
babies that smell like babies.

***
A Few Plans For The Rest Of The Week:

Still more soccer camp. And more soccer camp.

***

Picture thought 

DSC_0001

One more kiss before he goes...

Pieta

This is very sad news.  Our family will continue to pray for the peaceful repose of Ryan Barrett'ssoul and for Our Lady's consolation of the Barrett family in their sorrow. Mothers all over the world are grieving with Mary Ellen today.

 I'm going to gather my children in this afternoon, hug them a little tighter, hold them a little longer.

Eternal rest grant unto him, O Lord.    And may perpetual light shine upon him.  May the soul of Ryan Barrett and all the souls of the faithfully departed, through the mercy of God rest in peace.

Look Who's Talking!

I had the pleasure of talking with Rachel Balducci and Lisa Hendey yesterday afternoon. It was so nice to push away from the keyboard and just chat--with my voice and not my fingers. I even sat with a pencil and paper and doodled the whole time! Crazy. We talked about romance and marriage and then we moved on to boys and sports. And, of course, it wouldn't be Faith and Family Live! if we didn't slip in a little laundry talk. And now, you can hear the whole conversation and you can call in and leave feedback, too. Pretty cool.