Hang in There, Baby

On the Willows has been on hiatus for a few months, but now it’s back! And I have a new post up over there, about the strategy of “hanging in there” when you find yourself in one of life’s pits. Click here to read.
Life. Motherhood. Vermont. (Not necessarily in that order.)

On the Willows has been on hiatus for a few months, but now it’s back! And I have a new post up over there, about the strategy of “hanging in there” when you find yourself in one of life’s pits. Click here to read.
My parents recently moved 15 minutes away from us (cue angelic chorus). Part of this process involved packing up the house in Virginia where they’d lived for 27 years.
In no way are my parents hoarders — they’re far too neat for that — but they’re not quick to throw things out. When something breaks in my house, for instance (and things break here every day), we usually toss it and think, Yay! Less stuff! My parents would fix it. This is because they’re frugal, but also because they have an emotional attachment to certain things. They remember who gave them the gravy boat, and exactly where and when they bought the bookcase. They save papers for historical and nostalgic purposes. They keep careful records of their granddaughters’ vital statistics at every check-up.
But their new house in Vermont is smaller than their former house in Virginia.
So, when it came time for my parents to load the truck, they offloaded several large boxes on me. The contents of these boxes included school papers, report cards and test scores, artwork, compositions, awards, and photos — stretching back as far as preschool.
I’m an only child, so you can just imagine.
And that’s how I found myself sitting on the kitchen floor several naptimes in a row, sorting through records of my past.
Most of this was dull (programs of all the science fairs in which I’d participated, academic award certificates), or embarrassingly awful. My seventh grade English teacher was either a saint or a masochist, because she had her students keep a running poetry journal throughout the year. Nobody should have to go back and read the poems they wrote in middle school. I bet even Shakespeare turned out maudlin, self-centered treacle when he was twelve. My own efforts were just as dreadful as you’d expect — but even worse were my personal journals, especially those I kept while I was reading the collected works of L.M. Montgomery (you can tell because I refer to my parents as “Mother” and “Father”).
But some of what I found in those boxes was fascinating — and surprising. And I think it applies to more than just myself.
1. My strengths have always been my strengths. It’s difficult for me to discuss what I’m good at, because — along with topics like money and icky feelings — I grew up believing that talking about one’s successes was rude. BUT, in those boxes was clear evidence that I’ve always loved writing. Not only that, but (middle school poetry aside), I’ve always been pretty good at writing. My teachers said so, year after year. I won awards (like First Place for Humor in the Scholastic Art and Writing Awards). Re-reading my creative writing projects, many of them painstakingly illustrated (I wasn’t bad at art, either), I almost wept at the amount of time I’d invested when I could have been playing Donkey Kong. A career test, taken in my teens, revealed that my two top career fields would be the “Communication or Caring Professions.” I was a college writing tutor, and developed and taught a nonfiction writing course with a friend our senior year.
2. My weaknesses have always been my weaknesses. “Anxiety” is a word that comes up repeatedly: in personality assessments throughout school, in notes from my parents’ discussions with counselors, and even in my autobiographical writing. A psychologist whom I saw a couple of times in fourth grade even gave me a diagnosis: “Overanxious Disorder of Childhood with minor depressive features.” Holy Cow! Doesn’t that just about sum us all up?!? Also, I cared a little too much about what other people thought. I concluded a six-page autobiography from sixth grade with: “If you got bored during the last part of this, I don’t blame you.” My mother, in notes from a discussion with a counselor, wrote, “To help define what Faith would like to be. She has no image of that girl. Just what Mom & Dad want her to be.” Holy Cow!
3. I had absolutely no clue about either my strengths or my weaknesses. I’ve always considered myself to be relatively self-aware, yet all evidence points to the contrary. I had all the information, I just didn’t apply it.
Despite everything that should have encouraged me to focus on writing and the arts, I consistently said, year after year, that I wanted to be a lawyer. My father is a lawyer, and I suppose it’s common to begin with the desire to follow a parent’s career path. My career aspirations did change in high school, when I started doing well at science fairs; then I decided that I’d be a biologist, which is what I told prospective colleges. Not surprisingly, I dropped that idea after one year of college biology.
More seriously: that anxiety. Despite having been diagnosed as overanxious, despite writing my college admissions essay on how I’d overcome crippling anxiety in the past, I continued to struggle with crippling anxiety, perfectionism, people-pleasing, and overall lack of identity for the next decade. (And those things still rear their ugly heads when I get off-kilter to this day).
All of which leads me to this: I think we always are who we are. Certainly our experiences shape us in crucial ways, but we’re all born predisposed to a set of strengths and weaknesses that stick with us for life. This doesn’t mean that we can’t change; obviously the point is to dial up the strengths and dial back the weaknesses. But change requires self-awareness.
Which leads to one more thing: I think, somewhere between toddlerhood and adulthood, most of us tend to forget who we are. We suffer setbacks and traumas, we try to conform to who we think our parents, friends, or the culture want us to be, we read too much L.M. Montgomery and start adopting her voice. We ignore all the signs, and take a wide detour around our true selves.
It’s nice to believe, decades after those papers were filed away, that maybe I’m finally starting to zero in on who I am — which is who I was all along. It’s confirmation that, as a parent, a big part of my job is to help my daughters accurately identify their own strengths and weaknesses; to help them know who they are and be the Best Them they can be. So that they don’t find themselves sitting among the file boxes decades hence, wondering, Why didn’t I pay attention?

My husband and I have an ongoing joke this year; whenever we have one of those conversations that focuses on a problem — something sad, or stressful, or disturbing — Erick will end it with, “And also, we’re going to die!”
That’s what I get for confiding in my husband that this year I’ve become acutely aware of how fragile our bodies are, how at a certain point everything in the physical realm starts sliding downhill, how death seems to be breathing down our necks more than ever before.
He tells me I’m having what’s commonly known as a “mid-life crisis.” I can’t believe that I’m old enough to be having a mid-life crisis, but when I note my age relative to the average life expectancy, I admit that he’s probably right. (The average life expectancy for American females of all races in 2010 was 81.1. I’m 38 years old — almost halfway there).
If you’ve been following this blog over the past year, you had some warning that this was coming when I turned 38. The realization that I was entering middle age, the fact that I’d just given birth to what we expect will be our final child, and the humbling analysis from my (20-something) dental hygienist that the onset of my first cavities was probably due to “age,” threw me into a bit of a tailspin. Although I ended that 38th birthday post on a positive note, my tail has continued spinning.
So, lucky you! You get a front-row seat to my mid-life crisis. Unfortunately, it seems that my mid-life crisis will not involve fun things like buying a sports car, getting a tattoo, taking up with the gardener (if only we had one!), or running away to Acapulco. No; for my own mid-life crisis, I will apparently sit right here in my Vermont kitchen and think the following thoughts:
–My body will never be any healthier than it is right at this very moment.
–We’re all dying. What have I done with my life so far? And what will I do with the time I have left?
That last question is a big philosophical issue. It’s important, but, to be honest, I have less trouble with the philosophical struggles of middle age than with the physical. My religious faith helps immensely in this. Also, even if I never get a book deal or win an award in the future, I figure four kids is a pretty decent legacy.
In other words: I don’t fear death as much as I fear decades of chronic back pain.
Fortunately for me, I do not (yet) suffer from chronic back pain; unfortunately for him, my husband does. He’s always been prone to throwing out his back — usually on the eve of our next baby’s birth. But this year, due to a combination of age and a job that requires long hours at a computer, his back pain has become chronic. He takes ibuprofen, he sees a chiropractor, he’s tried acupuncture, he does back exercises and stretches every single night, we bought a Sleep Number Bed, and he sleeps cocooned in a complex arrangement of pillows. Sometimes the pain is better, sometimes it’s worse, but we’re coming around to accepting that it’s probably going to be around for the long haul.
My own aches and pains are more varied. It turns out that when you hit your late 30s after having given birth to four children in six years, that body you’ve taken for granted — ignored — for so long, suddenly makes its presence known. Hello! it says. Remember me? I’ve been working hard for you, and now I’m gonna make you FEEL it!
Too many people live with far more discomfort than I, for a much greater part of their lives. But for almost four decades, I’ve been blissfully unaware of my good health. Sure, there have been uncomfortable moments, but I’ve always assumed that if something hurts now, it probably won’t hurt later. After a certain age, one can no longer make that assumption. If something hurts now, it may well hurt for the next four decades.
Assuming I have four decades left. Not a safe assumption when our parents’ friends are starting to die, and people our own age are diagnosed with serious illnesses at an increasing rate.
It’s all enough to make a person feel a little…down.
I found some solace, oddly enough, at a memorial service.
The man who had died was a member of our church. I didn’t know him well, but our church is small and he was someone who’d quietly touched everybody within arm’s reach during his 88 years. (He read my articles in the Addison Independent, and he often sent me thoughtful email responses). He made a quiet but deep impact upon his world despite struggling with severe depression through the years. It might be more accurate to say: He made his impact upon the world because he struggled with severe depression through the years. He was very open about his struggles, even with me in the brief time I knew him.
He’d chosen the “Hallelujah Chorus” from Handel’s Messiah as the closing music for his memorial service. Before it was played, the pastor told the story of how Handel came to write Messiah. When Handel found the libretto which inspired his famous oratorio, he was at one of the lowest points in his life. He’d recently had a stroke, which had paralyzed his right arm and made it impossible for him to perform or conduct music. He complained of blurred vision. He was out of favor with the royal court, and in debt due to a failed venture into the opera business. Despite these struggles — it might be more accurate to say because of these struggles — he went on to write a world-shaking piece of music.
I sat there thinking about my friend changing lives while fighting depression, and about Handel composing Messiah with a bum arm and blurred vision. And then I thought about the veritable galaxy of people who’ve made huge impacts while struggling with physical and mental pain: John F. Kennedy had severe back pain, Franklin D. Roosevelt was paralyzed by polio, Georgia O’Keeffe and Isaac Newton suffered nervous breakdowns, Beethoven was bipolar. The notable people who’ve struggled with depression are too numerous to list. More recent celebrities with chronic back pain include George Clooney, Bono, Bo Derek, and Elizabeth Taylor. And that’s only the tip of the iceberg.
Is it necessary to suffer in order to make an impact? Probably not. But one could make a compelling argument that struggling with chronic physical or mental pain sharpens empathy, tenacity, and focus. My husband says that his chronic back pain has made him more acutely aware of — and grateful for — those times when he isn’t hurting.
In any case, reflecting upon the numerous people who’ve had full and meaningful lives that included acute discomfort made me realize that life is not over just because one’s physical condition has begun the downward slide. As I move into middle age and experience increasing physical discomfort, I can choose to fixate on and complain about my aging body — eventually becoming, in the words of C. S. Lewis, “a grumble.” Or I can take inspiration from those who’ve persevered despite — or because of — pain. I’ve been spoiled by three decades of comfort, but it well may be that the decades to come are richer — spiritually, mentally, emotionally, creatively — despite (or because of?) the presence of some physical pain.
And also, we’re going to die.

“It’s just a season.”
I heard that phrase tossed around by other mothers all the time after I had children. Its intent was to convey the fleeting nature of the various woes and sacrifices we endure in the name of parenting; to give hope that this, too, shall pass.
Haven’t slept a full night in months? “It’s just a season.”
No date night with your spouse since Junior arrived? “It’s just a season.”
Can’t finish a book longer than Green Eggs and Ham? “It’s just a season.”
Excercise? HA! “It’s just a season.”
Feeling conflicted/stressed/embittered about work/life balance? “It’s just a season.”
I started using the phrase, too, because I believed it. Once you’ve survived your first child’s newborn stage, you do see how quickly things change. The self-denial that’s necessary in early parenting (like not showering for a week, the better to constantly hold your newborn) evaporates once your toddler can play by herself — and the next thing you know, you’re putting her on a school bus that whisks her away for 7 hours a day.
Hope is important. During the first years of parenting, sometimes it’s all you’ve got.
However, now that I’m a new parent again for the fourth time, I’ve been doing the math. If we consider the first five years of a child’s life “that season” — the time during which we’re most likely required to put our own plans and desires on hold — then from the birth of my first child until the moment I put my fourth child onto the school bus, 11 years will have elapsed. Eleven years is not “a season;” 11 years is more than a decade, more than a quarter of my life-to-date.
This scares me, because lately I’ve noticed that I’ve been using “It’s just a season” to justify what might charitably be called “complacency” — and what might truthfully be called “laziness.”
So, I’m not as involved in the community, in volunteering, in helping others as I might like? “It’s just a season.”
So, I’m terrible at keeping in touch with friends who live elsewhere? “It’s just a season.”
So, I have all these creative ideas percolating but all I can manage is to write a couple of 900-word blog posts a week? “It’s just a season.”
So, we used to dream about traveling the globe with our children, but we haven’t been more than 3 hours from home in almost 4 years? “It’s just a season.”
This is intended neither as an underhanded way of fishing for compliments, nor as an overhanded smack to anybody who doesn’t do these things or have these goals. This is just an honest assessment of where I am right now: I worry that I’m getting too comfortable.
It used to be a stated goal of our marriage and our individual lives that we wanted to get uncomfortable whenever possible. Doing things that were out of our comfort zone — like managing a school build in central Tanzania, living in a neighborhood where our bikes got stolen and our windshield got shot out, or even just hosting a big group to dinner at our place — was good for our souls, because discomfort forces reliance on things greater than yourself: FAITH.
But throw in four kids, home-ownership, and a steady job, and suddenly comfort looks mighty appealing. It takes us 30 minutes to get out the door. Not to mention, there’s malaria out there….
It’s both unavoidable and appropriate that parenthood changes one’s risk tolerance. Things like travel now involve the safety of four additional little people — and have also become really, really expensive. But I suspect that, too often, I’m hiding behind my children, using them as an excuse to take the easy way out of experiences that might be slightly complicated.
If the “It’s just a season” mentality encourages us to delay adventure and challenge until some elusive future when things will get easier, it also encourages us to miss the present moment. “it’s just a season” implies that where we are right now — in the trenches with very young children — is a time to be endured, the way we grit our teeth and wait out the grey, frigid, shut-in season of late winter by focusing on the promise of coming spring. So I sit them in front of a video and count the hours until school starts again….
Writing this from the middle of my season, I worry that I’m missing it: missing both the chance to embrace challenge, adventure, and discomfort — and also missing out on the quieter joys of having a house full of little ones.
When I began writing this post, I didn’t know where it would lead. (That’s usually the case, which is why writing is one of the few adventures in my life these days). Now I see that it was leading to two goals. Here they are, my attempts to thrive rather than just survive this season:
1. I resolve to do at least one thing that makes me uncomfortable each week, whether that’s picking up the phone to call an old friend or flying to Uzbekistan.
2. I resolve to feel grateful for at least one thing each day, to find joy in my present circumstances, even if that circumstance was playing My Little Pony on the carpet for hours.
I have a hunch that, when this season ends in five years, I’ll find that the next season isn’t quite as rosy as it looked from a distance; having four children in school may not be as freeing as I’ve expected. I won’t know for sure until I get there, but at the very least I can try to live now in such a way that I won’t look back and wonder, “Where was I those 11 years?”

This is National Eating Disorders Awareness Week. In solidarity with the 0.5-10% of the female population who struggle with some form of eating disorder (according to the Academy for Eating Disorders), I’ve written about my own post-college experience with anorexia. This was not an easy piece to write, as it required me to dredge up some rough memories, but I hope you’ll check it out over at On the Willows. Click here to read.
It being Valentine’s Day, I thought I might write a little something about love. So a few nights ago at dinner, I asked my family how they’d define love. I was hoping for some cute little sound bites.
Of course, my children can tell when I’m sniffing around for quotable material, so they clammed up immediately. “Uh, I dunno,” they said. “Love is when you like somebody a lot.”
So, sorry folks; you don’t get to read a lighthearted piece about love. Because my children were right to resist my efforts to boil love down to a cute quote. In the same way, we should probably resist the Valentine’s Day Marketing Department’s efforts to boil love down to cards and candy and flowers. Throughout the course of this past decade, which has encompassed 10/11 of my marriage and all of my childbearing years, I have learned repeatedly that LOVE IS NOT CUTE; LOVE IS TERRIFYING.
Listen: I’m an enormous fan of love. I happen to believe that love is the purpose of our lives, the most important thing we can do with our time on this planet.
But we’ve been sold a lie about love. For my first two decades of life, I longed for love in any form: romantic love, friendship love, spiritual love, the love between parents and children. I longed for love because it would make me feel good. Everything I’d heard and seen indicated that love would validate me, would be an assurance that I was okay, would make me feel happy.
Partly, I blame fairy tales for my misconception of love, especially the Disney-fied versions. One of my daughters recently noted, “None of the princes in fairy tales has a name. Are they all just called Prince Charming?” Good point. We make a big to-do about the portrayal of females in fairy tales, but if I were the mother of boys I’d be pretty steamed at the absence of male role models. Love in fairy tales is only about the female protagonist; her nameless love object only exists to free her in some way.
Likewise, my initial impression of love was primarily about ME: how I felt (mostly, I was supposed to feel good). It took almost another two decades to discover that that was the opposite of love. In fact, love is not really about me at all; it’s primarily about the other person, the loved one. Which means that mostly, I won’t feel “good” when I’m being loving. Mostly, love will feel like work, like a fight, like “a cold and a broken ‘Hallelujah.'” (Leonard Cohen told the truth about love).
Perhaps the purest incarnation of love is dying for somebody else. Stepping in front of an oncoming car so that your child won’t be hit. Sydney Carton going to the guillotine in place of Charles Darnay at the end of A Tale of Two Cities. Jesus on the cross on behalf of all humankind.
I used to imagine these scenarios as a way of testing my love. Would I take a bullet for a friend? Put my children onto the lifeboat and go down with the ship? Push my husband out of the way of the runaway train?
Then I realized that love asks us to die a little bit for our loved ones every day. Sure, occasionally love demands a big dramatic gesture, but mostly it involves doing things that you don’t really want to do.
For instance, I never, ever want to wake up in the morning while it’s still dark in order to change diapers, fix meals, and mediate disputes, but every morning that I force myself up out of bed, I’m dying a little for my children. Erick and I would both probably rather read or watch T.V. once the kids are in bed and the house is quiet at last, but every evening that we force ourselves to sit and discuss our days and ourselves and our relationship, we’re dying a little for our marriage. And I’m usually scared to fix a meal for somebody else (Will they like my cooking?), or pick up the phone to call a friend (Will I be interesting enough?), or host a party (The house is a mess and I’m so tired….), but whenever I force myself to do these things, I’m dying a little for my friends.
Love is a gradual process of killing yourself for others.
(To be clear, I’m not talking about a martyr complex: If you’re sacrificing yourself to manipulate others into gratitude or repayment, it negates love because you’re really just making things all about yourself. I’m also not suggesting that love requires giving up your identity. If you have no sense of self, no boundaries, then it’s impossible to love others without fizzling out. A healthy sense of self is not the same as selfishness).
Oh my gosh, it’s so hard, isn’t it? Especially when your child accuses you of being mean when you’ve just spent all day ministering at her sickbed. Or when you feel like your spouse just doesn’t get you. Or when your friends seem to keep taking and taking.
We’re not big on hard these days; our culture is all about making things easy for ourselves. We can do so many things with the touch of a few buttons: cook a meal, buy stuff, pay our bills. Love is one of the few things that remains hard.
So why bother?
I’d submit that the most worthwhile things in life are hard — the things that we have to work or fight for. But what about when love doesn’t feel worthwhile, when your efforts are repaid with eye rolls or indifference or divorce papers?
That’s where faith comes in. Faith is love’s water; it’s necessary in order for love to survive. We put love out into the world like a seed that we may never see germinate. Or like making a fire in the woodstove; I pile the wood on top of the glowing embers, but then I have to sit and wait a while until the wood heats up enough and suddenly bursts into flame. We love even though we may never see a payoff; we love because we have faith that it’s the right thing to do, that somewhere down the line it’ll make a difference in a life — or in the world.
We’re all gradually dying anyway. We’re slowly killing ourselves simply by living another day. The question is: what are we dying for? Are we spending our lives serving self, work, pleasure… or love? I’ve tried serving all of those things. And love is a slow dying to ourselves, but it’s the only thing I know of that doesn’t kill my soul.

Happy February! I’m back.
In a manner of speaking.
I’m back, but a little broken.
“Humbled,” might be a more accurate word.
“Still exhausted,” would also be true.
If you regularly read this blog, then you know that in early January I announced that I would extend the “Pickle-cation” I began over the holidays in order to do some restorative reflecting and writing. I had high hopes that this month-long break would provide me with tons of new material, a fresh outlook, inspiration by the truckload.
This is not a triumphal re-entry.
I can’t remember a more difficult month — personally or for our whole family — than this January. Like anybody, I have bad days; days when I feel like I’m clawing my way up the walls of a deep, dark pit, trying desperately to find some joy. The entire month of January was like that for me.
There weren’t any big tragedies, just a steady stream of days that became progressively more difficult. There was the freezing Arctic air — colder than usual, even for Vermont — which kept us housebound and cancelled school and skiing and, one particularly busy morning, froze both garage doors shut. Then Erick went to Africa for two weeks. Four days after he left, the girls started getting sick. By the time he returned, every girl had been sick at least once with either a stomach bug, a fever bug, or a confirmed case of the flu. The Gong supervirus also took down three grandparents (who’d come in shifts to help while Erick was away), and me. Three days after his homecoming, Erick was also sick.
Did I mention that, during this time, our bathroom was being renovated? Also, Georgia was getting potty-trained for good, which meant a lot of bodily fluids always needed wiping up at exactly the worst possible moment.
So, on January 31 — the last day of my “break” — I sat at my computer, exhausted and with nothing to show for my month of bloglessness except a hacking cough, and I felt very, very sorry for myself.
Self-pity brings out my worst self. It’s probably one of the most dangerous emotions, because it promotes selfishness and gives birth to resentment and anger. Poor me, I thought, this was supposed to be my month of rest, but I’m more exhausted than when it started. It was supposed to be my month to concentrate on writing, and I had less time than ever to write. I spent all my time taking care of other people, and NOBODY took care of ME!
See? Dangerous. Before too long, that kind of thinking would have me angry at my husband, resentful of my kids, and ungrateful for all the help I do receive.
Self-pity is like living by the banks of a poisoned river, but choosing to use the water for drinking and cooking and washing because, hey, it’s right there. Then, one day, someone passes by and says, “You know, there’s a lake filled with beautiful, clean, clear water right over that mountain!” But instead of making the effort to get to that clean water, you say, “Naw, I’m good. I’ll just keep poisoning myself with this water right here.” The worst emotions are always the easiest. They’re also the ones that slowly poison our souls. But getting out of them, finding our way back to joy, to gratitude, to selfless love — that’s HARD WORK. It’s like scaling a mountain — or clawing out of a dark pit.
How could I claw my way out of this self-pity?
It just so happened that when half of our girls were sick and sacked-out on the couch, their grandfather had shown them the VeggieTales version of Jonah on his iPad. Which reminded me that the story of Jonah gives an honest (and hilarious) portrayal of self-pity.
Even if you didn’t do time in Sunday School, you probably know the first half of Jonah: God tells Jonah to take a message to the evil city of Nineveh, Jonah says, “No way!” and sails in the opposite direction, terrible storm rocks the boat, Jonah realizes it’s his fault and demands to be tossed overboard, fish swallows Jonah (thus saving his life), Jonah feels grateful, fish spits out Jonah.
But that’s only the first half. In the 3rd and 4th chapters of Jonah, Jonah finally does go to Nineveh to deliver God’s message. The message is: “God’s going to destroy this city in 40 days.” But instead of getting mad at Jonah and killing him (which is presumably what Jonah feared at the outset), the Ninevites repent. Once they’ve repented, God changes his mind and doesn’t destroy the city.
And Jonah is LIVID. “Awwww, God, I knew you’d do this!” he yells. “That’s why I didn’t want to come here; you sent me to condemn this horrible city, but I knew you’d take pity on them in the end! I’m so mad I could DIE!” Jonah sits down on the ground and pouts. Like some kids I know. Like myself.
A plant growing over Jonah gives him shade, and he feels a little better. But then a worm eats the plant so that it withers and dies. “I’m so angry I wish I were dead!” Jonah whines again.
I understand exactly how Jonah is feeling here: Not only has he just had a harrowing near-death nautical adventure, NOW God’s used Jonah against his will as a tool to save the wickedest city of his time, and on top of that he can’t even pout in peace because a worm just killed his nice shade plant. Sheesh.
It’s classic self-pity.
And here’s what God says to Jonah: “You have been concerned about this plant, though you did not tend it or make it grow. It sprang up overnight and died overnight. And should I not have concern for the great city of Nineveh, in which there are more than a hundred and twenty thousand people who cannot tell their right hand from their left — and also many animals?”
Boom. That’s it; that’s the end of the book of Jonah. God’s great like that: “–and also many animals.” Full stop. No further advice or explanation.
But God’s saying: Get over yourself, Jonah. You’re so worried about your little shade plant, but I’m worried about an entire city of lost people (and also many animals). And that may just be the best advice for overcoming self-pity: Get over yourself. Raise your head and look around at all the people who need your help.
I thought this would be my month to get into myself; to spend time hanging out in my head, putting my thoughts into words and putting the words into print. But God had other plans. Instead, this was my month to get over myself. There were people who needed my help. (And also one animal). My people are more important than my words. That’s a blessing, not a pity.
It’s good to be back.

INTRODUCTION: In the first part of this piece, which appeared yesterday, I related how I’d been bombarded by the viral video commercial for GoldieBlox — construction kits that are being marketed specifically to girls in order “to get girls building” — while considering Christmas gifts for my own four daughters. After an initial rush of enthusiasm from consumers, GoldieBlox experienced some backlash for peddling pastel toys while simultaneously claiming that they wanted to “disrupt the pink aisle.” All of which raised interesting questions that get at the heart of our culture’s confusion about what it means to be a female: Are traditionally “girly” toys and games (dolls, tea sets, princess play) inferior to traditionally masculine toys and games? In order to encourage girls to engage in more “masculine” play, do we need to make separate-but-equal toys (i.e. traditional boy toys in pastel hues)? And if we answer “yes” to the two previous questions, aren’t we being demeaning to girls? So where does that leave us?
I’ll attempt to tackle some of these issues based on my own experience.
Click here to read Part 2 of this post over at On the Willows.
In our house, we try to fight against Christmas becoming all about gifts. Our children get presents, but since we buy sparingly I spend a lot of time considering what to purchase, because I want it to be meaningful. We have four girls, so while considering toys this year I couldn’t avoid the GoldieBlox phenomenon.
For those who missed it, GoldieBlox is a toy company whose stated mission is “to get girls building.” Concerned that men vastly outnumber women in science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) jobs, GoldieBlox designs storybook and construction sets for girls. Their “Princess Machine” commercial, in which three girls design a Rube Goldberg machine throughout their house, went viral this fall — and, no doubt, sold lots of GoldieBlox sets.
My own finger hovered over the “Add to Cart” button on the GoldieBlox website. Then I stopped, because something I couldn’t quite name was bothering me.
Click here to continue reading over at On the Willows. Because this is a long-ish article, it’s divided into two parts, with the second part publishing tomorrow.

Dear Friends,
I hope that you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving — and I hope that you’re continuing to feel gratitude as you wash out the final Thanksgiving Tupperware and head on to the next holiday. We Gongs had a lovely harvest feast, complete with a set of grandparents and a dusting of snow — doesn’t get much better than that! We also managed to keep Gracie apart from the turkey, to take a family photo in which just about everybody has their eyes open and is looking in the same direction, and to take the girls cross-country skiing the morning after Thanksgiving — all feats requiring a mix of luck and Olympic fortitude.
Where we live, there are many cornfields. Having lived here three years now, I’ve observed how cornfields are plowed and planted for a few years, and then allowed to rest for a season. Come summer, I’ll notice that a certain field is no longer an orderly series of cornstalks, but instead is dressed in its natural grasses. This allows the soil to breathe and replenish before the field is planted again. Lesson here: Creation takes effort, and everything needs a rest.
So now I am going away (virtually speaking) for a little bit. As you can imagine, the holiday season at our house is a little crazy (as it probably is at your houses, too!), and this year it feels particularly busy. Whether that’s due to having more — and older — girls, a baby who’s still not quite sleeping through the night, or the near-constant stream of (very welcome) houseguests we’ve had since Halloween, I’m not sure. Probably all of the above.
Bottom line: I’m tired. And I haven’t had as much time to think or to write as I generally need for optimal mental health. At the same time, I’ve been trying to keep up with the pace I’d set for this blog, where I’ve been churning out at least one new post a week for two years (minus a few weeks of re-posts when Abigail was born). For two years, I’ve loved every second of writing The Pickle Patch, but it’s starting to feel like…work. A grind. Unsustainable.
So, since I’m my own boss here, I’ve decided to take some time off — send myself on a “Pickle-cation,” so to speak. I’m not going to publish any new material for The Pickle Patch at least through New Year’s. I’m keeping the end date of my Pickle-cation open, but I expect to be back here by February. I will continue to publish new material for On the Willows and The Addison Independent, because those are outside commitments, and I’ll post those links here in case you’re going through major withdrawal.
I plan to use my Pickle-cation writing a lot, but with the leisure of not having to publish weekly. I plan to sit back and reflect on what I’ve got to say, to think new thoughts, and to play around with new ideas that may or may not have anything to do with this blog. Above all, I plan to enjoy the holidays with my family without resenting early mornings or missed naps or late nights that might take me away from writing. My hope is that you’ll thoroughly enjoy your holidays, too, without feeling the need to read anything new from me!
With love and gratitude to you all, until 2014,
Faith