Nine

Remember when she was small?

You rocked her to sleep in the quiet heavy dark

You stayed there longer, lingering

Later, you wrote to remind yourself: I sit in these moments. Do my best to, anyway.

Remember

Sit in these moments

Even as they speed up and splinter off and spill over

I can’t keep them

But I can stay there a little while

Linger

And taste know (sigh) every ounce — every ounce! — of love

Remember.

Each time it feels eternal, essential: singular

Because it is

And it isn’t 

And that is the good

that is God.

Remember

In the kitchen

I’m in the kitchen and I’ve burned the bacon for our sandwiches.

You’re in the next room on your iPad, doing I don’t know what.

Silently, automatically, almost subconsciously, I sink,
repeating the mantra of a programmed white woman:
I’m a bad mom.
Fucked up again.
Not good enough, never good enough.
Must try harder.
Confess, as if they were sins:
I smoke weed
I drink, maybe too much
I get lost in the suffering of this world
I’m distracted

But it’s a lie.
I’m not a bad mom.
And if you ask me (which you won’t),
Why is this bacon burned?
I will tell you the truth: because I care, my love.
I am paying attention.
I am seeing people erased in real time
And I care
And I’m scared
And I love you
And I love them
And I love all of us
And it’s not that hard to do why can’t we just Love?

Stop

Stop killing

Cease
Fire

I’ve burned the bacon
as if it makes one goddamn bit of difference!
We still will eat tonight.
I’ll take the most charred pieces,
Trying to shield you from life’s disappointments
In this and a thousand other absurdly tiny ways.
Knowing that I can’t protect you
But trying
Because I’m ashamed to face the weight of your pain.

I must face it! and that of all children everywhere
which is all of us, actually,
in order to stay human.
To transform.
To get free.

The truth is, even if we didn’t eat tonight,
Even if we lost everything,
Even if we lost each other,
I wouldn’t be a bad mom.

There’s no such thing.

There are only bad systems
Promising power
Dishing out poison
And telling us to like it.

Floating

Several months ago, I quietly celebrated the two-year mark since my metastatic breast cancer diagnosis. I didn’t do anything special, just prepared myself for the waves of emotions and allowed myself to feel them. Allowed myself to feel tremendous gratitude for how far I have come and where I am now. Acknowledged the hard work I have done, as well as all that I have left to do. Remembered how very lucky I am.

Allowed myself to think back to that day, the day I got the call. Allowed myself to grieve.

July 29, 2017, marked the beginning of a new way of life. A shift, a breakdown, an awakening. It was 8:30 a.m., on a Friday. Mike was home, had taken the day off because we had plans to head out to the beach house for the Mettler Classic, our annual family golf tournament and gathering, named for my grandmother, who loved a good party. Lucy lay asleep in bed between us. I was awake, expecting the call. 

I’d had a biopsy of a 1.4 cm lesion on my right hip bone earlier in the week, and I was waiting for my oncologist to deliver the results. Several weeks prior, I’d asked for a bone scan because of an odd discomfort in my leg and an unsettling feeling in my gut. I’d been responding well to chemo, the tumor in my breast had shrunk significantly, and I had surgery and radiation scheduled. I was in the home stretch of my treatment. But something didn’t feel right, and so I asked for the scan. I figured if it was clear, it would alleviate my anxiety and help me finish strong. I could get through my last couple of infusions and focus on getting well. I wanted to put my fears to rest.

But the bone scan was not clear. So my doctor ordered a PET scan and a biopsy, and here we were, waiting for the results, hoping, expecting, even, that they would be negative, that the blip was some old injury or a cyst or something that had been there for years. The PET scan showed low metabolic activity in the hip lesion and no additional areas of concern: great news. So we were just waiting on the results of the biopsy.

My phone rang on my bedside table, and I picked it up.

“Good morning, Dr. Kundra, how are you?”

“I’m good, I’m good. So the biopsy…it came back positive, actually.”

“Oh.”

Not good, not good, not good. Panic setting in, heart racing, eyes welling up. What does this mean? I know what it means. A nightmare. Metastasis. Stage 4 cancer. I’m going to die. I have to be on chemo for whatever is left of my forever. I’m never getting my port out. I’ll never be well again. What about my family? What about Lucy? I’ve let everyone down. I’m so sad and so ashamed and so disappointed. And so scared. Oh, my God. 

And then, emptiness.

My doctor rattled off some more information, used words I couldn’t process, asked if I had questions.

“Not right now,” I answered.

I hung up. Let it sink in, head down. Breathe. “It’s cancer,” I told Mike. Lucy snoozed away, sprawled out across the bed. My precious, barely two-year-old, girl. What would become of her childhood?

“Huh.” And he held me, hugged me, let me cry.

I got up, called my mom. Asked her to please let my dad and sisters know, because I couldn’t. Cried some more.

We decided not to go to the beach. I didn’t think I could handle being around so many people, not with this huge unknown hanging over me. I didn’t want to talk about it, didn’t want to darken the weekend of fun. I wanted to stay home, where I felt safe.

Mike got up and went to the store. He came home, inexplicably, with a dozen doughnuts, something we never have. Fuck it, I thought, and ate one. Let Lucy have one all to herself. What difference would it make?

Somehow we got through that day, and the next. Mike and I went to a baseball game that Sunday. The Mariners were playing the New York Mets, and I commented on the strange coincidence of that matchup…my home team battling the Mets while I took on my own personal mets. I took it as a good sign that my boys won that game. Glimmers of humor, of hope, beginning to shine through cracks in the walls of my fear.

In the weeks and months that followed, I researched, read, learned, talked, planned, and moved forward. I advocated for myself. I convinced my doctors to proceed with my full treatment protocol, including surgery, radiation, and reconstruction. I implemented a number of complementary therapies to support my overall health. Somewhere along the way, I found hope again. And, unexpectedly, I began to feel excited and happy and even grateful for the position I was in and the path ahead. I began to believe that I was going to live.

And day by day, I did, and I am. Alive. Living. Some days I barely survive, others I thrive. It’s okay. I struggle with fear. A lot. It makes me anxious and impatient and short-tempered. Sometimes I feel depressed, sometimes I feel explosively angry. Sometimes I feel isolated and so alone. Sometimes the fear makes me lash out at the people I love most. I make a lot of mistakes. But I have a lot of help, and the fear fades. I reflect. I learn. I apologize. I talk about it. I reconnect with my people. And I have moments of utter peace, of complete contentment, of deep joy and wonder for my miraculous life. 

I am learning that these big emotions come and go, that we have an unlimited number of chances to pick ourselves up and forgive ourselves and try again. That the people who matter will love us, even through our lowest, most vulnerable moments. That I deserve that love and that I can give that love to myself, too. I guess that’s resilience, though it feels much more awkward in real life, in the thick of it, than it does when you read some sparkly inspirational quote about never giving up.

Lucy swim

I was watching Lucy at her swim lessons last week, noticing how she goes rigid when she’s practicing her floats, even though her teacher tells her to relax. Sometimes she panics, kicking and splashing, trying desperately to keep her head above water, forgetting that she’s held, that she’s completely safe. It strikes me how like life her practice is. The more we try to tighten, grasp, and control, the more afraid and anxious we become, and the harder it is to find peace; we sink. But when we relax and trust—even thought we may be scared—we find ourselves carried, cradled by the currents of the universe, by God, by whatever it is that supports us and keeps us afloat. 

I’m practicing too, at this very moment, as I heal from my most recent surgery and await my latest scan results. Although I’ve enjoyed good health and no evidence of disease for nearly two years now, I still find myself grappling with fear, with the unknown, with the “what-ifs.” I’m fighting to keep my own head up when deep down I know that I’m protected, buoyed, and propelled by love, hope, and faith.

There is so much beautiful uncertainty in life, and our landscapes are always changing. Maybe the trick is to get comfortable with that truth, to find freedom in it, to let go and float.

What it would repair

About a week ago, Lucy fell asleep with her head on my chest for the first time in nearly a year. I lay there in her little bed, holding her as the old lullabies played, and I cried. I cried with grief and relief and joy, all at the same time. Such a simple moment, but something I have missed so much.

From minutes after she was born, Lucy found the ultimate comfort nestled against my chest, falling asleep there, often sneaking her hand down my shirt to feel the soft warmth of my skin. And I found my way as mother with her at my breast, nursing her on demand for 20 precious months and cradling her against my heart day and night. Cancer ripped that comfort and closeness away from both of us, first when I had to wean her before starting chemotherapy and then again when I underwent a mastectomy to remove as much of my remaining and potentially treacherous breast tissue as possible.

That loss, the premature severance of a physical bond between mother and child, has been the hardest and most painful part of this entire experience. It is the part that makes me cry when I think back over the last year and half. It is the part that feels unfair. It is the part that–I’m ashamed to admit this–brings envy every time I see a pregnant or nursing mother. I am beyond (beyond!) grateful for the months I had with Lucy when she was an infant, and I love her even more now, if that’s possible. Feeling strong and healthy and happy enough to truly enjoy this present time with her is the biggest blessing.

But still. I grieve the loss. It was unexpected and traumatic and it sucked.

My mastectomy was in September of 2017, and the post-op healing process took several weeks. When I was finally able to hold Lucy again, she struggled to be comfortable. Where there had been softness, a natural pillow, there was now barely more than bone covered by a thin layer of skin. She would turn her head this way and that and squirm, never complaining, but not content. I would lie with her at night to help her fall asleep, and she would lie on top of me, wriggling around until she found a soft spot on my belly on which to rest her head. We got used to it, but it always felt a little awkward and sad.

Six weeks ago, I had reconstructive breast surgery. My husband posted a goofy photo to Facebook: me, drugged up, in surgical gown and cap, with a caption about celebration and #tatas. We may think of plastic surgery as a casual choice, even a vanity. Maybe we joke about enhancements and touchups. And while there was certainly a welcome element of that lightheartedness and humor going into my surgery, it was tempered by the gravity of why it was happening and the hope of what it would repair.

I was in the operating room for nearly 12 hours and in recovery for three additional days–by far the longest hospital stay I have ever had. I now have a slash across my abdomen that stretches from hip to hip. This is where the surgeons harvested skin, fat, and blood vessels with which to build new breasts. I have oval-shaped scars outlining my new “girls,” scars from tape blisters, scars from various drains, wires, and tubes. After surgery, I couldn’t stand up straight, raise my arms, or lift, push, or pull anything more than 10 pounds for weeks. Everything hurt.

You might be thinking, “All that for new boobs? Sheesh.”

I get that.

But now clothes fit the way they should, and I feel more confident in the way I present myself to the outside world. When I look in the mirror, I no longer see cancer. I see scars and strength and beauty. And Lucy once again has a place to rest her head. That is what I wanted most of all.

She’s getting so big. And that’s awesome because every day she grows is a day I get to experience and appreciate. But I also want to hold my baby close a little longer, before she’s all grown up and I’m out of chances.

And now I can.

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The day before my breast reconstruction.

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Ready for the OR.

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Six weeks post-op, feeling whole again.

 

There will be rainbows

I have been thinking a lot about hope. Hope is where I live right now, but my shelter is fragile. Fear comes calling often, and so do doubt and grief and worry and anger and pain. And there are cracks in the walls and leaks in the ceiling that I must constantly mend. Some days they are easy to patch and others, not so much. With an important post-treatment CT scan looming on my horizon, my battle between hope and fear is raging.

I have a tendency to expect the worst–or at least, to not expect the best. It is one of my most trusted defensive plays; by expecting the worst, maybe the disappointment will sting less. The problem is that I sacrifice opportunities for joy, surprise, and delight. I fail to see the power I have as the author of my own life. I get too caught up in grim possibilities to recognize what is good and wonderful right now. I am working on that.

A few weeks ago, Lucy and I were on the road to my mom’s, heading down the freeway on a typically gray February day. Eyes straight ahead, I drove on, aware of the cars around me but pretty much on autopilot, having made that same trip countless times. I was jolted out of reverie by a sudden exclamation from Lucy in the backseat.

“There’s a RAINBOW, Mommy!”

I glanced over, expecting a faint swath of color or some reflection in the window. (She has no difficulty finding wonder in the most ordinary things. She makes friends out of scraps of paper. She thinks dust motes are beautiful.) Instead, I was startled and amazed to see a perfect, full arc stretching across the sky. It was complete, vibrant from end to end, each color equally strong. It was the most beautiful rainbow I have ever seen, and I almost missed it. I’m so thankful for the eyes and heart of my brilliant daughter. I am grateful for the way she sees the world and shares the magic she finds. She teaches me to notice and appreciate life and to be excited about it. What a remarkable gift at a time like this.

I hold on to these moments, these sparks, with more care and tenderness than I used to. I am learning I can change, that maybe those fatalistic tendencies are not my true nature. I am finding that I believe in magic and miracles and signs and meaning. This cancer journey has released my spiritual world, a world that has always lived in my heart but which my rational mind has been shy, ashamed even, to embrace.

I am learning to change my perspective, to soften and bend and be vulnerable. To give way to hope, to let it fill me with light and comfort and ease. To forgive. To really love, unconditionally, and without expectation. To let go of guilt and resentment and bitterness towards myself and others. It feels good. And though I struggle every day to keep the fire going, to strengthen it, to believe in it, I am shifting toward a truer peace and happiness than I have ever felt before. The battle is raging, but hope is winning. She is stronger than fear. She can outlast.

My scan will come and go. It will be good to have it over with, no matter the results. I have found it is better to know than to sit with uncertainty in these situations. And there will be more scans and tests and anxious moments in my future. There will also be plenty of other worries and fears that are not related to my own personal health. But there will be rainbows, too, lots of them. I just need to notice.

Rainbow Soup, aka minestrone
adapted from The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen by Rebecca Katz

I acknowledge that I have been a big ball of emotions in my last few posts, but I do intend to continue sharing recipes on this blog. I have learned a lot about the power of nutrition in strengthening the immune system and supporting the body’s ability to fight cancer and recover from treatment. Rebecca Katz’s fabulous cookbook has been life changing. I hope that some of the ideas I share here will inspire or help someone else who might be going through cancer treatment–or who just wants to cook and eat healthy, delicious food.

It has been very chilly in our neck of the woods lately, and I have been eating a lot of soup. This one is hearty, colorful, and full of flavor, especially when topped with basil-lemon pesto.

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Serves 4-6

Ingredients:

1/2 bunch Swiss or red chard, stems and leaves separated
2 tbsp olive oil
1 medium onion, diced
Sea salt
3 carrots, peeled and diced
2 stalks celery, diced
2 small or 1 medium zucchini, diced
1 tsp (or more!) minced garlic
1/2 tsp dried oregano
1/4 tsp dried thyme
1/4 tsp fennel seeds, crushed (Use a mortar and pestle or a rolling pin.)
Pinch red pepper flakes
8 cups vegetable or chicken stock
1 14-oz can tomatoes (Use tomatoes that are already crushed or diced, or get whole tomatoes and crush or roughly chop them.)
1 15-oz can red kidney beans, drained, rinsed and tossed with a little lemon juice and sea salt
1 cup shredded purple cabbage (about 1/4 of a small head)
4 oz short pasta (elbows, ditalini, rotini, etc), cooked and drained
1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley

Instructions:

Finely chop the chard leaves AND the stems. Set each aside separately. Heat the olive oil in a large pot over medium heat. Add onions and a pinch of salt and saute, stirring occasionally, until soft and slightly golden, about 5 minutes. Add the chopped chard stems, along with the carrots, celery, and zucchini. Saute for an additional 3 minutes. Add the garlic, oregano, thyme, fennel seeds, red pepper flakes, and a large pinch of salt, and saute until fragrant, about 30 seconds to 1 minute more. Add 1/2 cup of stock and deglaze the pan, scraping up any brown bits and letting the liquid reduce by half.

Add the remaining 7 1/2 cups of stock, along with the tomatoes, beans, and cabbage. Bring the soup to a boil, then reduce the heat so it simmers gently and cook, uncovered, for 20 minutes.

Stir in the chopped chard leaves, along with another big pinch of salt. Cook for 3 minutes more or so, until the chard is slightly wilted. Add the pasta and parsley and stir. Taste, and adjust seasoning as needed.

Serve topped with Basil-Lemon Pesto (recipe follows) and grated Parmesan cheese.

Basil-Lemon Pesto
adapted from The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen by Rebecca Katz

1 cup loosely packed basil leaves
2 tbsp freshly-squeezed lemon juice
1 tsp lemon zest
1 clove garlic, crushed and peeled
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 cup walnuts
1/2 tsp sea salt

Place all ingredients in a food processor and process until the walnuts are very finely chopped and everything is blended well together. Taste and add salt or lemon juice if needed.

Glow

On election night, I struggled to sleep. I tossed and turned in bed and was thankful when Lucy awoke at her customary 3 a.m. I changed her and nursed her and sat with her as she drifted off on my lap, cozy in a blanket and secure in my arms. I fell asleep like that, in the yellow armchair with my feet propped on a stool and my nose in her hair. I slept there, holding her, until Mike came in sometime after six, already showered and dressed, to get a sweater from the closet in her room. I didn’t want to let her go.

I had been having nightmares about Trump winning the presidency in the weeks before the election. So I wasn’t altogether surprised when it happened, but, boy, was I sad. I had hoped hard that the bad dreams wouldn’t come true, that my fears would be allayed with a sweeping victory for Hillary Clinton, a victory that would not only give us our first female president but also reassure us, resoundingly, that our country is not lost to hate, ignorance, racism, sexism, and xenophobia. I hoped hard as I waited in line to drop off our ballots. I hoped hard as I played with Lucy at the park under the warm, blue sky. I hoped hard as the results rolled in and the night stretched out, looking bleaker and bleaker. I was ready to celebrate on November 9, to be proud, as a woman with progressive ideals, as a mother to a strong-willed daughter. “That could be you, someday, my love!” is what I wanted to say to her. I wanted to be excited for the future, not scared of it.

But now I am finding it hard to look at her without feeling like I failed her by somehow allowing this ridiculous, terrifying outcome to transpire. I do not want my child to grow up in a country where hate is legitimized and bullies win, a place that is isolated from the world, a place where liberty and freedom and equality are empty promises for most, truly only intended for a privileged few. I don’t know what the next four years will hold, but I am worried. Not just because of the man in office, but because of the ugly truths of this nation that his campaign uncovered. I am worried that people will not be good to one another.

I didn’t want to leave the house yesterday. I had to, though, because we were out of diapers. At the store, I felt distant and floaty, as if I were underwater or had taken a sleeping pill. I pushed the cart slowly, feeling disconnected and yet wondering how many others around me were experiencing the same sadness, the same sense of muted rage. Back home, we went about our day. I stayed away from the news and social media.

After dinner and washing and pajamas, we went outside to say goodnight to the moon. We’ve missed it lately, either because of its newness or the weather or some unnecessary urgency. But last night the moon shone through the window and Lucy beckoned me to the front door to take her outside, into the darkness. I held her up, and she craned and reached toward that glowing rock, joyful and amazed. The world is so magical in her eyes. I need to keep that wonder alive for her as long as I can, to glow for her, reflecting her glory like the moon shines by the sun. She is my sun.

I am uncertain of the future, but what I know is that right now I need to be strong and hopeful–for my sake and for Lucy’s. I need to love her and teach her to love–and to care. We have entered into a strange time, and it is hard not to feel alone and angry and impotent. It doesn’t help, though, feeling like that. It doesn’t make it better.

So her daddy and I will teach her to love. We will teach her to be proud and to believe in herself. We will teach her to look out for those who need help. We will teach her that the world is much bigger than herself.

We will also teach her hard truths, about injustice and prejudice and power. Not to scare or embitter her, but because she needs to know. I don’t want her to be knocked down by somebody else’s blindness or bigotry; knowledge is the best armor we can give her.

Most importantly, we will teach her to see goodness in the world. In people, in nature, in art and music, in experiences: see the good. Reflect it–glow from it–so that others notice, too. Use it as a shield when the world feels menacing.

I hope that this election, which stunned so many, will ignite conversations, actions, and movements that bring healing to communities across the country. I hope that instead of further distancing and alienating ourselves from our neighbors, we seek ways to connect and to fight back, peacefully, for the good we believe in. Perhaps these connections and conversations and actions and movements and fights will be the good that comes out of this mess. We will have to wait and see.

In the meantime, I will watch the moon with Lucy.

Unburdening

It’s funny how saying something out loud (even if “out loud” means shouting it into the cacophonous dump that is the Internet) takes so much of the heaviness away. I guess it’s like confession, an unburdening of what weighs on the spirit. I feel so much better.

Lucy is 16 months old today. Closing in on one-and-a-half…hard to believe. The sun is still with us, off and on, here in late October. We have not yet hunkered down for the long, dark, rainy days of winter in the Northwest. She loves to be outside, no matter the weather, and on days like today, it is easy to go.

 

We go to the park or to the beach, sometimes both. She runs and climbs and slides and follows other kids around. Sometimes she tries to share wood chips with them. Today, she wanted to swing forever. She put her head back and her arms out and laughed at the wind.

She chased seagulls, too, and tried to go after geese that were as big as she is. No fear.

I let her run; she stopped before she hit the water and came back when I called her. When it was time to go, she waved to the playground and said, “Bye-bye!” so sweetly, with no tears. Maybe I bribed her with an applesauce pouch for the ride home, but so what? We’re learning, both of us, and we are happy.

What matters most

I am a monster. I feel prickly and ugly and mean. I yelled at my baby today, and I made her cry. I cried, too. Ugh. I don’t want to write about it, but I need to. I need to unpack and examine the pieces of the broken thing so that I can put it back together in a sturdier way.

My Lucy is, I think we would say, “spirited.” She is unlike me in so many ways. She is confident, outgoing, curious, questioning, physical, and fearless. I love that she is so strong, but it scares me, too. I expect her to do what I ask and to listen when I tell her, “No.” When she doesn’t, when she laughs instead and continues climbing on chairs or eating paper or running away from me, I don’t know what to do. If I snatch her up and try to restrain her, she arches and squirms and practically foams at the mouth, and I fear I will drop her. I want her to learn to communicate and follow directions, not to use force to get what she wants. But I also have to keep her safe; from the beautiful, scary world and from her bold, reckless self.

Today it was the recycling bin. She followed me into the laundry room, where we keep the garbage and recycling. I was changing the wash and looked over to see her picking up an empty beer bottle. “Lucy, no,” I said firmly. “Put it down.” She looked at me and shook her head and said, “No-no,” with her mischievous smile and bright eyes, then lifted it toward her mouth. “NO!” I yelled, in big, red, angry letters. And, in a rage fueled by insecurity, I yanked the bottle from her hand, slammed it down, steered her out of the room, and closed myself in. From the other side of the door, I heard her start to cry in shaky, heaving sobs. I started the washing machine, then stepped out, tears in my own eyes, and gathered her up, shushing and soothing and wiping wet cheeks and apologizing.

I try to stay calm, to use words and actions to teach her limits and expectations, to show her what I mean. I try. But I have a temper that is hotter than I like to admit, and I get so frustrated when she won’t do what I say. I take it personally, as if this 16-month-old baby is deliberately trying to make me mad. (Well, maybe she is because she thinks it’s interesting when I get red in the face and make loud noises.) So I end up grabbing things away from her, picking her up, and removing her, kicking and screaming, from the scene. And then I feel awful and incompetent and too guilty to function for several hours afterward. It is not good. I worry that I am not the best person to be with her all day, every day. I worry that I am going to raise her to be completely out of control, that her teachers will talk about her in the staff room and she’ll need a behavior plan at school. I worry that she’ll be scared of me because I yelled at her or held her too tightly.

Usually, as was the case today, after the tears there are snuggles and stories and a nap. The nap fixes a lot. Lucy gets the rest she needs, rest that is hard to come by for a child who never stops moving. And I get time and space to myself, to take care of what needs tending most–whether it be housework or the emotional beast that lurks in the space that connects my heart and soul and mind. When she wakes up, we are happy to see each other. She buries her face in my neck and lets me hold her for a long time.

I am not a monster, not really. I know that. I’m just a mama who has no clue what she’s doing–and yet feels like she should be doing it better. I’m good at everything, so I should be good at this gig, too. But this is not a gig, and it’s not about doing it right. I’m  not doing it for reward or recognition or even for my own satisfaction. Being Lucy’s mother is my life. It is who I am now. I love her more than myself, more than fresh air and water and stars. I hope that is what matters most. I will learn to be more patient and less uptight, to trust myself as a parent, to find creative and loving ways to teach and discipline. I will try not to yell. Whether or not it harms her, I hate the way it makes me feel.

I will forgive myself, and I will keep trying. I know that she will, too.

 

 

Still here

Hello! We are still here. Why didn’t anyone tell me that the first three months of toddlerhood would be as hard as having a newborn? Seriously. We had this baby thing down. And then, suddenly, we most definitely did not. Lucy transformed–it felt like overnight–from a relatively gentle and mild-tempered child into a running, shrieking, poo-eating, pissed-off tyrant. I was not prepared for the change, and it was tough on all the levels. I felt as though I had done something wrong, and I didn’t know how to fix it. Our “baby-proofed” home turned into a house of horrors, and our beautiful yard became a toxic minefield of hazards. At the park, all she wanted to do was eat wood chips and hug dogs and strangers. At grandma’s house, charge headlong down the stairs and play with fireplace tools. The last couple of months have been nonstop–fraught with anxiety but full of love and fun, too. We are still here, and we are getting the hang of it.

Lucy’s second summer was bursting with firsts. Her first steps got surer and faster every day, and now she runs everywhere on her long, sturdy legs. She finally got some teeth, and now they are coming in strong–and sharp. She understands so much–which she demonstrates by either doing what we say (“Lucy, go get your ball!”) or impishly shaking her head and running, giggling, in the other direction (“Lucy, come get your diaper on!”) She went on her first airplane trip this August, when we flew to Las Vegas and then drove on to Arizona to celebrate her sisters’ birthdays and visit with family. She has learned to make animal noises and use a spoon, sort of. She takes big bites of toast, pizza, bananas, and whatever else she can get her teeth on. She gives the best, tightest hugs and the sweetest kisses. She says, “Mama,” at last. It is such perfect music–even when it’s delivered with dramatic sobs because I won’t let her eat toilet paper or drink my coffee. She is becoming herself. I guess I could say she is becoming more independent, but I’m struck by how little meaning that phrase has until you see it in action.

I am starting to relax a little again, and to revel in her delight at the widening freedom she finds every day. I am amazed by her growth. I can enjoy it now that I am not so constantly terrified of it. She is adjusting to new capabilities and limits, and I am learning to be comfortable with this small person on the loose.

And so we settle in, cautiously content while anticipating the next wave of change. The season is changing, too; fall is here, and I am glad. I love the slanted light and the smoky air. Lucy loves the big, bright moon and the crows. It is cool enough to turn the oven on and bake. We are busy in the kitchen; she reorganizes the pantry, bringing me soy sauce and an unopened box of tapioca while I make cookies. I stop frequently: to comfort her when she drops a can of beans on her toe, to pry from her jaws some bit of crud she has found on the floor, to admire the lid or container or spice jar she wants to show me. I tried letting her stand on a chair to help me mix in chocolate chips, but she thought it would be better to remove them from the dough by the fistful. She’s not so grown up, not yet. Soon enough. I can wait…and I can’t wait. It’s the strangest thing.

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Chocolate Chip Cookies

These are my favorite cookies of all time. I have made two batches in the last three weeks and am almost ready for more. We have been eating quite a lot of cookies lately. Recipes for chocolate chip cookies usually call for equal amounts of white and brown sugar. I was out of brown sugar, so I used extra white sugar and added some molasses (which I did have, for some reason), per the conversion chart in one of my cookbooks. The results were just as good as the original. I also believe chocolate chip cookies are better with nuts. I usually use walnuts, but I was out of those, too. I used cashews in one batch and almonds in the other. Obviously, since we have polished off six dozen cookies in three weeks, these substitutions worked out just fine.

Ingredients:
2 1/4 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1/2 cup each white and brown sugar OR 1 cup white sugar plus 1 tbsp molasses
1 cup (two sticks) butter, softened
2 eggs
1 tsp vanilla extract
12 oz (1 package) chocolate chips
1 cup chopped nuts

Directions:
Preheat oven to 375°. Combine flour, baking soda, and salt in a small bowl and set aside. In a large mixing bowl, beat together butter and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs to butter mixture one at a time, beating after each addition. Beat in vanilla. Gradually add the flour mixture to the wet batter and mix well. (Add about 1/3 cup of the dry ingredients at a time and mix after each addition to minimize the faceful of flour you get when you turn on the beaters. Or mix by hand.) Stir in chocolate chips and nuts.

Drop spoonfuls of dough onto an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake cookies for 9-12 minutes, until they are golden brown. Cool on the cookie sheet for a few minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

 

We made it

My baby turned ONE!

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It happened so fast, just like that man at the grocery store warned us it would. The last three months have felt like someone pushed fast forward and sped us up, so that now, at this pause, we are breathless, tired, and exhilarated. We made it.

I’ll get to her day in a minute, but first I need some space to stash a few milestones and memories, so that when it’s my turn to give condescending advice to young mothers, I can say smugly and with confidence, “Well, my daughter didn’t crawl until she was almost 11 months, but then she she started walking less than a month later!” while they nod kindly, and murmur, “Mm-hmm,” just like I do now. I understand why they say things like that, in those tones, the veteran mothers. It’s pride and love and enthusiasm for their children, so I don’t mind. But I am always surprised that they remember so clearly. I worry that I won’t. I can’t remember who won the Super Bowl or the World Series from year to year, so maybe I’ll forget Lucy’s stats, too. And really, it doesn’t matter, but I’d like to try to hold on to them–for her, at least, if nothing else, because I’m sure she’ll want to know.

So. She started crawling shortly before the 11-month mark. My sister Maddy was enticing her with a dog-gnawed, slobber-damp tennis ball on the floor at my parents’ house, and Lucy was pretty keen on getting her hands and/or mouth on it. Scooting and army-crawls ensued. A few days later, she started crawling at home, beelining for cords, outlets, sharp corners, and choking hazards, and getting faster by the minute.

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She started pulling herself up on the furniture next, first on the couch and in her crib, then on low tables and windowsills.

(If you are the Mommy Police, please forgive the mobile in that first picture. I didn’t realize she could pull it down on her head, until she did, and then I saw that it was intended “FOR BIRTH TO FIVE MONTHS ONLY.” Oops.)

Cruising came next, slowly at first as she gingerly moved from chair to ottoman, then faster as she became more sure of herself, and finally flying around the perimeter of the living room, coasting smoothly from one handhold to the next. And then, all of a sudden, she let go! She stood there, balancing, clapping, waiting. Mike and I watched, frozen, as she took one step and then a couple more before falling back onto to the carpet with a bump and a giggle. These miraculous steps happened on Tuesday, four days before her birthday on Saturday. Wednesday was my last day of school, for the summer and for the next year because I am taking leave to be just a mama for a while. We made it.

Now it is summer, warm and easy. I’ve been waiting for this time, waiting for the stress and work and worry of teaching to release me so that I can turn my whole focus on home and family. Waiting for Lucy to be one, so we can get on with the business of toddling. I am so happy. She is happy. Mike is happy. It feels as though our whole house has taken a giant sigh of relief. We made it.

We had tickets to the Mariners game on Lucy’s birthday, June 25, but as we got closer to the day, that seemed like the wrong activity for a baby’s first birthday. So we gave them away and went to the zoo instead. Lucy loved it, as we knew she would. She smiled at the gorillas, howled with the lemurs, and crooned at the giraffes. The rainbow-colored tropical birds delighted her, and the wiggly brown otters made her laugh. We bought her a stuffed tiger at the gift shop, and she hugged and kissed it until she fell asleep on the way home.

For dinner, we had salmon and lentils with roasted cauliflower (one of her faves), followed by vanilla cupcakes. She ate it up, proudly using a small fork and spoon that belonged to my sister; my mom had pulled them out of the curio chest last time we visited her. She was too tired to open her presents that night, so she went to bed and slept like an angel.

She opened gifts the next day, some from us and some from her grandparents and aunties. She loved them all: the baby doll, the blocks, the toy lawnmower, the mini trike, the zoo puzzle that makes sounds, the dump truck with drivers, the stuffed narwhal. Each morning now, when I bring her out of her room to greet the day, she giggles and points and wriggles toward her birthday loot.

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So it was a great success, birthday number one. Lucy is not a baby anymore. I didn’t cry, like I thought I might, at such an important and bittersweet transition. She is such a bright and cheery light, one that is much too strong to let sadness linger very long. And now we will move on, into the summer, with walks and talks and trike rides ahead. Days at the beach and baseball games and popsicles and sprinklers. We made it.

Birthday Dinner (Pan-seared Salmon with Braised Lentils)
adapted from Cooks Illustrated – serves 4; or 2 adults and a toddler, with leftovers

2 tbsp butter, divided
1/2 bunch Swiss, red, or rainbow chard – stems and leaves separated, stems chopped and leaves cut into 1/2-inch ribbons
1/4 cup finely chopped onion
1 clove garlic, minced
1 big pinch dried thyme
2 cups chicken stock or water
1/2 cup lentils
1/2 tsp lemon juice
salt and pepper
4 salmon fillets, skinned
1 tsp oil

This is a one-pan recipe, so choose a wide-bottomed, heavy skillet that is big enough to fit all of your salmon fillets.

Melt 1 tbsp butter over medium heat. Sauté the chard stems and onion until soft, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic and thyme and cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Add 1-3/4 cup broth, lentils, and lemon juice. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover, and simmer until the lentils are tender to your liking, 30-45 minutes. Taste and season with salt and pepper. Transfer the lentils to a bowl and cover to keep warm.

Wipe the pan clean. Pat salmon dry and season with salt and pepper. Heat oil over medium-high heat. Add salmon, skinned side up, and cook until browned and fillet releases easily from the pan. This takes five minutes or so. The flesh should be opaque to a point about halfway up the fillet. Carefully flip the fillets and continue cooking on the other side for 3-5 minutes. Transfer to a plate and tent with foil to keep warm.

Finish the lentils by transferring them back to the pan. Add remaining 1/4 cup of broth and cook until hot. Add the chard leaves and remaining butter. Stir until chard is wilted, about 3 minutes. Taste, season, and serve topped with salmon fillets.