When Irish eyes are smiling

 

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So the whole making-of-the-food took the better part of the afternoon.  That still surprises me – how long it takes to make food.  You'd think I'd be getting on to that. <g> There were some very happy diners tonight though which made it well worth whatever else we didn't do today. 

St Paddy's day found me with Irish pub music blasting in the kitchen.  I should tell you I was gently crooning Danny Boy to the children as they stirred, but then you'd look at their faces anyway and probably guess that we were belting out Drunken Sailor instead. Yeah.  Probably no more inappropriate than my Gram singing about them "hangin' men and wimmen for the wearin' o' the green" in her kitchen while I was the one licking the beaters.

If you're Irish this all makes perfect sense.  If you aren't, I should probably just stop here. ; ) 

So anyway, over generous portions of shepherd's pie husband explained the various ways one can become a full time resident of Ireland,  older kids tumbled in from Irish dance practice, and laundry ran rather continually.  

And that was a rather wonderful day. Wishing you same. 

 

on the road – the journey

 It has become more and more challenging to post these updates. As it turns out we have been on more of a journey than a trip.  It has been exhausting at times but we have packed in as many visits as humanly possible.  Even then, time has run out before I could see some people I hoped to see.  The visits we did have however have had me thinking, praying, grateful. 

There has been a theme to the conversations we have had over and over and over across the country and back as well as in the emails in between.  Many of us are parenting adult people now.  Let me just tell you that is surreal. And wonderful.  And a little terrifying.  

I remember so many of us as we navigated first pregnancies, colic, feeding, sleeping – or not sleeping.  The days when the first trip to the grocery store alone with your newborn and toddler could strike fear in the bravest hearts.  Those little people could cut loose with a blood curdling scream with no notice at all.  They might vomit their body weight at church.  Lock themselves into the public restroom.  Stick tweezers into light sockets.  Climb out windows.  Get away from you at the library, skillfully remaining on the other side of the shelves while you dodge left and right with the stroller.  

Ask me how I know. 

There were days when you landed in bed exhausted just keeping them alive and well. It was hard to imagine it ever being harder than this.  In truth what got us through some of those hours was the firm belief that when they 'got bigger' it was going to be SO much easier. 

We were wrong about that. 

There comes a day when you no longer have to put on their pjs nor put them to bed.  But instead of sleeping soundly like you pictured, you find yourself lying awake praying they have enough snow driving skills to make it home ok.  You no longer frantically search for that second church shoe but you may sit in the pew praying fervently for the child who is home questioning the faith.  Instead of beating back the laundry monster you are skyping married children living in other states, your machine sitting quiet nearby. 

It's not all bad.  It's just not all as easy as we may have expected.  You play your cards right and they grow up to be fascinating intelligent people. They also grow up to be people with free will and all the other challenges everyone has.  They make decisions that may echo your own.  Or they may make choices that are very different.  (that part is often ok)

That bit about there being no second generation Christians is really true.  That bit about learning from our own mistakes more than anyone else's is also true.  They have to work out their stuff just like we did.  This is where we move into an advisory role and then realize that we would give anything to once again be able to do all the work ourselves.  

It's tempting to over analyze at this stage, especially if you still have children at home.  Did we do things "right"?  Were we strict enough? Too strict? Did we read enough books?  Give them enough vitamins?  What could we or should we have done differently?

We have spent the past several weeks sharing stories of those long ago years and connecting with people who knew us when.  We have heard their stories.  We have laughed til we cried.  We have cried til we could laugh again.  I kid you not – over and over and over again.  

So when a younger mom asked me to elaborate about some impressions I had about the difference between raising kids "then" versus now I just was not quite able.  Not yet. There are just not enough words formed yet to sum up.  I can only say it was worth it, for all of us, this journey.  It has stretched us beyond belief.  Our hearts have a far greater capacity then we expected. Even when broken they hold joy we could not have dreamed of. 

As one friend said, "It's been quite a ride."

Quite a ride indeed.  I am privileged to have traveled along with so many awesome women.  And as much as I miss them it is so incredible to have them sprinkled all over the world wherever we go.  Here's to us, friends. This thing we are doing is as big as it feels. Big stuff.  

 

(totally random and sorta unrelated recent snaps from the road)

 

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On the road – retracing my steps

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When we had a little pocket of time last week we took a drive together, Allen and the little kids and I, to the places I lived when I too was little. The first stop was this farm outside Milwaukee where my grandparents boarded and bred horses. My youth is divided into two distinct eras – the 'old farm' years and the 'new farm' years – based on where my grandparents and the horses were and hence, where I was to found whenever possible. 

I have been back here once or twice before but never with a camera. It was good to have real pictures to connect to my memories.  I can remember what it was like sitting behind that picture window in my grandmothers' office while she sat at her desk writing letters.  I remember the tulips that used to bloom in a circular brick planter in the yard.  The Victorian picture frame that came from this attic is sitting in my house in England.  Whoever would have imagined?

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I remember my grandfather teaching me to skip in the gravel drive between the house and the barn.  That drive seemed to be a vast wide open frontier that stretched to infinity.  It took a loooong time to cross that space at one point in my life, to climb the ramp into the hayloft and walk very carefully avoiding the cracks in the wooden floor. 

It was a happy place.  A place where my grandmother made snow angels with me. Where she polished white nurses shoes before her evening shifts.  Where a plank was drilled with two holes and threaded with a coarse rope to make one perfect swing for me in a tree in the yard.  My dog is buried in those woods.  If I close my eyes I can hear dry leaves crunch underfoot as I made the pilgrimage to pay my respects to that old friend. 

The milkhouse with the cool concrete floor where I played for hours on end still stands. The fields where I used to race my pony are now full of suburban homes, no longer new. Ironically the streets were all named after British locations.  I cried a little on those blacktopped streets where grass once grew tall and the wind used to whip through a sorrel Shetland's mane. 

I miss this place and the people who loved me there.  I miss the visits from the city relatives in cat's eye glasses and cars with leather seats.  I miss my grandparents.  Since they couldn't come to the wedding I really wanted to 'see' them.  This was where I went.

 

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 We had a little time afterwards so we made a wide swing into the city to show the children my other homes.  This gets trickier all the time since most of the homes we have lived in over the years have been torn down.  This city holds different memories for me.  Not all good.  But it is a city I moved back to for college, the city I became engaged in. It was the city our son was married in, right across the street from the college his father attended.  Surreal.  That's all I can say. 

Much has changed here too.  When we turned around this bend in the freeway you could smell the breweries long before you could see them.  This was especially true in the summer in the days before air conditioning. 

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As the sun sank in the distance we headed back to the wedding preparations.  Many thoughts were hidden in my heart however.  Images of people now gone are a little more vivid.  There is that sorting and processing of memories, that work of making sense of what was as we move into what is and what will be.  

There is gratitude. Those were hard years peppered with bright spots of joy. 

On the road – together

 

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It's been many years since I woke up to a window like this. Temperatures have been in the single digits here in the great white north.  

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We were walking from the car to the restaurant tonight and Brendan says, "Hey Daddy, look!  I'm a factory!"  "I am too!" the little girls piped in.  They were blowing with all their might, sending great smoke stacks of steamy breath into the frigid air and intermittantly laughing hysterically. 

I grew up here. I shouldn't freak out over single digits. I think you acclimate though.  And then stop being acclimated when you leave.  But I promised myself I would not be one of those tiresome bloggers who write about the weather.  

(insert long pause while I think of something else to say….)

Fortunately there IS a lot of wonderful to share because cold as it is outside the house, the inside held every one of my children. All of them.  Together in one place.  Do you know it has been four long years since every one of them has been in the same room? I am so very grateful I did not know four years ago how long it would be. 

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We have been working diligently to finish last minute tasks – assembling favors, stitching slippers, gathering supplies. Mostly though, I am just soaking them all up.  

 

 

On the road – the Heartland

 

We are working our way across the Plains where you have three radio choices – country, country, and country.  This is ok with Alannah who has still not gotten her fill. 

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I can't tell you how many times we have criss-crossed the midsection of the country over the years.  People make wisecracks but I honestly don't mind the great plains.  It feels very wholesome and homey. If flat.

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Today the skies were brilliant blue and I managed to catch some of the countryside as we drove. It reminds me once again that everyplace is beautiful in its own way. 

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Random family anecdote: some 15ish years ago when we were trekking across the plains our transmission gave up the ghost. It was the 3rd of July.  There was one auto shop open in Grand Island, NE and the owner and his wife were finishing packing their RV as the tow truck pulled us in to his place, the only shop in town that had not closed for the holiday weekend. He called all over and finally found parts an hour away.  He sent someone to fetch them and we sat in his small more or less air conditioned office with five kids for many, many hours while he got our vehicle road ready again.  If you are reading this, send up a little prayer for a very nice Nebraskan.

Maybe send another up for a less eventful road trip this time. 

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Speaking of road trips, someone reported that Abbie thought we were driving back to England today.  "Noooo," she said. "I said we are driving back to England BUT stopping in Omaha first."  Well now, that is definitely more sensible, baby girl.   

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Little people can travel for approximately six hours before good humor wears out.  Just so you know.  That has been the magic number on this trip.  After that they ask how far Omaha is from ColoROdo and mention how they miss their little dogs and sometimes burst into tears because their sibling is using the crayons. The CHRISTMAS stocking crayons.  (gasp) The crayons which are getting imperceptibly smaller with each page they color…  

Hypothetically. 

This actually has the unexpected perk of distracting a mom from the thought of her adult children driving in another vehicle.  I so prefer to negotiate crayons. Stay little, stay little. : ) 

 

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Anyway, before long we found ourselves across Nebraska and in front of the world's largest Whole Foods for dinner. Awesome.  Crayon drama long forgotten, movies playing at the hotel.  We are winding down and the snow is beginning to fall. A fine day all in all. A very fine day.

 

On the road – then there were 9

 

This weekend was a gift.  Just pure respite.  Sun overhead, snow-capped mountains, shopping, and…

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The boys made it across the Rockies.  

The bigs are bickering and laughing and debating and going out and staying in and generally doing what they do when they are together.  Crazy people. : ) 

Asher took the little girls and Moira out to eat and to introduce them to Toys R Us. They approved. 

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The children now know what a Walmart is.  Its the place that sells EVERYthing.  The place people sometimes shop in pyjamas.  The place where you stand in line a looooong time to check out.  Really long time. There are pro's and con's but let me tell you it's a whole lot cheaper shopping in this country than in England.  And they only sell birthday cake Oreos here. That was pretty impressive to them.  

The icemaker has been a big hit.  Ok, ice in general.  They have had a lot of ice.

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Ice has not really caught on in Europe.  If you order a soft drink, you get a soft drink.  At room temperture.  If you order a soft drink near a US military base you can sometimes get a cold soft drink and they will nod knowingly in your direction and say, "Americans."

Other American things they have noted this weekend – we can do our hair in the bathroom.  We have no outlets, nor light switches, in bathrooms in Europe. They wanted to know why the police were stopping cars.  Speed is monitored via cameras in England.  Been a while since we've seen a car pulled over. 

I made my pilgrimage to Whole Foods.  Mwah.  I have missed you.  One thing I noticed this time though was the book section was pretty skimpy and the books were almost all vegan.  There seem to be no end to the pre-formulated products one can buy but very little information to educate with.  Signs of the times perhaps?  

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The guys met one morning for a a game of basketball with the men from church. Then several of them headed over to the US Air Force Academy to watch a game. 

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They spotted some deer on the Academy grounds.  Much bigger than our little roe deer. 

We had dinner with Brendan's godmother one night and Alannah and I met friends  downtown at a coffeeshop/wine cafe with live indie music.  Loved it! I missed a lot of this the first time around since we always had a baby in the house and were pretty tied up with farm and life. This is a perk of this season in life and it is good to recognize perks versus dwelling on what is no more. I always say you can't have it all, not at the same time and each season has its blessings.

There have been lots of big thoughts about community and personal growth and the dynamics of groups over time. About what comes next for us.  No answers yet.  I don't even know how I feel about all the questions.  We are talking though and have decisions to make.

For now though, the van is heading east…

 

 

On the road – first day

 

Asher and Colin worked their way across the Rockies today to meets us for the first leg of our road trip.  Colin lent me these shots from the road. Most of these are from Utah. 

 

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We woke up to the last of the recent snowfall though the weather was warming quickly. We haven't touched snow since last winter and that lasted one afternoon.  It was over a year before that when we had snow last.  It's very possible we will have had our fill of it by the time this trip is over.  Today though, some small people found it to be a real novelty yet. 

The temperatures have taken some getting used to but we have been saying this for a while.  In England it is much warmer outside but much colder INside.  As a group, the British are very thrifty with their heating oil.  It isn't cheap and is only used as necessary.  It is common to turn on the heat – turn it ON, not UP – for a few hours in the  morning and a few hours in the evening for 'washing up.'  In between you layer or you are asleep.  We keep our England house very cool by American standards and tend to complain about it to each other.  However I admit it now seems really warm in stores and homes and cars here.  I feel sort of extravagant walking around the house or store in shirtsleeves.

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The wind was wild as this first Stateside day began. It didn't stop Allen and Moira from taking a morning run however. 

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So then there were odds and ends to attend to.  Quick lunch with friends. Haircuts for some young men.  Tess discovered Highlights magazine while waiting.  Going to have to consider a subscription for her.  

Side note on Highlights. I can't glance at a cover without immediately thinking DENTIST OFFICE.  My Highlights memories are inextricably tied with dental appointments and just looking at one makes me twitch.  Saltwater aquariums have a similar effect.  Totally irrelevant share there.  Carry on.

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The little girls were pretty excited when Dad gave them 50cents to ride the horse outside the barbershop.  

And then there was some of this…

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We plan for down time on trips and have had a lot of discussions about jetlag – as in, if you suddenly feel tears welling up for no apparent reason or if your brothers/mothers/fathers/etc tone of voice very nearly sends you RIGHT over the edge then probably you are very very tired.  Very very very very tired.  And you should give yourself a little break.  

This actually applies to children too. ; ) 

So anyway, tears happen on trips.  And they are quickly forgotten with a little rest and snack and hug. 

And my crew just walked in again so will share more tomorrow. 

On the Road – winging it

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So that news I mentioned? Epic three week journey to the States.  I wasn't expecting to be able to post until after the fact but things fell into place and here is the first post.  This travel journal is going to be brief daily notes vs lovely image art.  Truly just a journal with whatever device I can grab.  Today that was a daughter's point and shoot. 

Will start with the real life hard stuff.  It isn't easy closing up a life for this long.  So.much.to.do before you can walk out the door.  And typically Murphy's law prevails which meant that in the days that led up to the flight a vehicle died, appliances were replaced necessitating last minute emptying/cleaning, a cabinet fell off, some people got sick.  There were various and sundry last minute fires to put out related to the big event we are leading up to.  

And I don't fly well.  That may be the understatement of the century.  Just know its not pretty.  At all.  

But there were many, many blessings along the way.  There always are.  

An older British woman in line near us in check in heard us call Abbie.  She said to me, "We have an Abbie too.  "Her Father's joy."  Why yes, indeed.  We don't pass through places like airport security without drawing attention so it is especially nice when people take a moment to compliment the children for waiting patiently and following directions.  

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The children were awesome.  All through the three hours of driving and nine straight hours in air.  It is going to be fascinating seeing America through their eyes.  The three little ones have little to no recall of this place. Abbie especially was only a year old when we left. Tess was three and has no recall.  Brendan was five.  He has hazy memories.   A good case in point is a conversation between them and Kieran when we went to a British store I'd found recently.  

"So what kind of store is it?" they asked.  

I said,"It's like a Target."

"What's a Target?" one asked.  

"I know that one!" said Brendan.  "It's that thing you shoot at with arrows!"  

"No," said Kieran, "She means it's like a Walmart."  

"What's a Walmart?" all three littles asked.  

So yeah.  It's going to be an adventure.  We're always up for adventure though. : )

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