24 Days Before Christmas

Thanksgiving weekend was full of family and I haven't found my way back here to recording til now.  Our son flew in from Germany.  It's a huge novelty to us that any of them can be here in a couple hour's time.  

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Please tell me other families use their smart phones to fortify their debate positions.  At one point three of us were furiously googling.  Speed referencing. ; D

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Saturday was the class feis for our dance school.  This is the fifth year some of them have danced but the first time one of their brothers has been able to come along.  After an hour he was very impressed.  After 5 or 6hrs their brother was pretty sure this would hold him over for a while.

 

 

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This brother manned the music.  

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and this one was just…done

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We sent Asher back home Sunday after lots of food and hours of tv series catch up with his sister and more hours of the inane debates only my family can get wrapped around the axle over.

Trust me. We.are.crazy. 

The days that followed have been steady.  We brought the Christmas decorations upstairs.  Sunday we set up the advent wreath. Every day we have done a little bit more after school time. Abbie and Aidan changed the wreaths on Monday.  Tuesday we pulled down the autumn banner.  Then we put away the Indian corn and leaf garlands and pumpkins.  We replaced our centerpiece.  Today we set the nativity up.  It feels like a sane pacem which is good.  Sane is good right now. I like sane.  By Christmas Eve it will all be in place. It is an Austin family advent – minus the baby part. 

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November walk

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“November is usually such a disagreeable month…as if the year had suddenly found out that she was growing old and could do nothing but weep and fret over it. This year is growing old gracefully…just like a stately old lady who knows she can be charming even with gray hair and wrinkles. We've had lovely days and delicious twilights.” 

– LM Montgomery

Lucy Maude captures my love for these days better than I.  So grateful for chance to wander the lanes with my boy on a still afternoon. 

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after the rain

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There has been precious little outside walking happening in recent weeks between rain and schedule.  I stepped out for a bit after it let up to soak up the smell of wet earth and run my hands along the cold iron fences.   In the distance farm hands called from the barn and a dog barked.  Right where I stood however not a thing was moving and that was beautiful. When the world slows its pell-mell pace for a moment it's good to just stand there and notice the still. 

The day began all the better for damp cuffs.  

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Hearken to these things, Job: Stand, and consider the wondrous works of God.

 - Job 37:14

Six

When I was one,
I had just begun.
When I was two,
I was nearly new.
When I was three,
I was hardly me.
When I was four,
I was not much more.
When I was five,
I was just alive.
But now I am six,
I'm as clever as clever.
So I think I'll be six
now and forever.

a.a. milne

 

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Can we do this?  Six forever?  I am working on my pitch but I don't think she'll bite. She's growing at a good pace now and not likely to turn back any time soon.  

Six has never been easy for me.  I thought I wrote about that long ago but if I did it's been so long it is now buried away someplace.  Still fresh in my heart though.  When Colin our oldest was still this size and I was newer at the mom job (a beginner mom if you will ; )) the significance of those first six years was impressed upon me.  Deeply impressed.  During those first six years a child could pick up languages and absorb new skills far more easily than later in life. The human brain would never again grow at such a tremendous rate.  It felt really really BIG.  I was in charge of a human brain and was bent on filling it to capacity with experiences and knowledge and art and music and…..then it happened. 

That little man had a birthday. The big S-I-X.  All I could think of was that metaphorical window that had just slammed shut.  Had I done enough?  Had I wasted precious moments in those years? Had we met his potential?  So many thoughts rushed in at me. 

Now we all are older, hopefully wiser.  I chuckle now over some of the worries I had then.  Most of them.  Other questions I would continue to ask.  Have I done enough?  Have we made good use of our time together?  

In all I would walk through those miraculous first six years ten times over.  While many parents long to survive that span it has always been pure joy for me.  Ok not potty training. Or colic.  That wasn't joy.  But the rest?  Incredible.  Each new tiny person seemed more entertaining and amazing than the last.  I have gotten a rush every time I put together Montessori trays or made playdough or blew bubbles in the yard.  

We are working through our learn to read book for very likely the last time. Knowing this makes it possible to listen to phonetic combinations drawn out painfully sloooooooowly, the verbal equivalent of early violin lessons.  We have sent the last of the 'first' Tooth Fairy letters. There is one training wheel (a stabilizer here in England) left on a tiny pink bike.  I told my husband it feels much like walking through a vacation cabin shutting doors and closing up after a very good season.  All her firsts are our lasts, lending a poignancy to each.

It has been a wonderful extended stay in the world of little people.  I do so hope that we will enjoy visits to this fairy land again as grandchildren join us.

For now though, we are six. 

 

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If the theme looks familiar, yes she wanted to wear her Halloween costume one more time and do things up Disney.  Alannah made her cupcakes to match and her daddy blew up enough balloons to float the table away.  : ) 

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about knowing

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"What are you doing?"  The new cashier looked puzzled as her trainer walked over to the register and stuffed handfuls of leftover Halloween candy stock into my grocery bags.

"It's ok," she replies, "I KNOW her!  She's got kids!  LOTS of kids. You give these to your babies.  They'll eat them!" Then she pressed a piece of chocolate into the palm of my hand.  "You take this one. I want you to eat this one in the car on your way home now."

Though we have privileges at a large military commissary I often prefer to shop at the smaller grocery store closer to home.  There are fewer cashiers and fewer options and sometimes that's really a nice thing.  It's a quick grocery trip versus an outing, an event.  Since we eat a whole lot there are many quick trips over the course of a year, especially during sports seasons when the boys play right around the corner. We have become regulars and now when we check out they ask about whichever children are not with me.  When I left my ID card in the car last time, my favorite clerk waved me on.  

"I KNOW you!"

In our experience it takes about two years in a place to reach this point of really knowing and being known.  Two years means you see familiar faces at the store.  Two years means you get halfway to your destination and notice the GPS is in the other car and it's no big deal.  Two years means your kid probably knows at least one other kid on the team at the beginning of the season.  Thing is, if you are a military mom, two years also often means the clock is ticking and next year this time it will reset itself in a new place. 

 

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That is probably what got me all whimpery and teary eyed reading this today: 

“But I won’t have any friends there. We don’t know anyone there,” my older daughter cried…. I swallowed hard. When we think of leaving it is not: can we take our favorite couch? It is not: how big is my new bedroom? It is not: does the neighborhood have a pool?  When we think of leaving, the faces of those we will desperately miss is what immediately comes to mind.  When it’s time to say goodbye, we are powerfully reminded that the most important things in life aren’t things.  And just like me, my children instantly felt the need for familiar faces—people who know us."

It's that.  

It's that which makes me hesitate for a half second when people proclaim how we have aaaaallllll the luck and how they'd love to go on vacation so many places. The thing is, this isn't vacation – where you leave all the regular stuff in its regular place and then return back to it.  It's a stepping out into a vast unknown.  It's about trying to find a dentist who understands the one child who doesn't like novacaine, finding a house that is wheelchair friendly and will allow that scruffy rescue dog because your kids have had enough goodbyes. It is figuring out where there is a good piano teacher.  It's about getting a doctor up to speed on who has had what. It's about locating that perfect team so kids can plug back into community. It's about praying fervently that those connections are made sooner vs later, ending that awful in-between time of not knowing and not being known.  

We are so very blessed.  When a meme floated around urging people to get out of their comfort zone, befriend folks who don't share your first language, are not your same age, etc I thought well, we have that one down pat.  That is our life!  It's worth every bit of the effort it has required.  It does require a fair amount of gumption though.  

 

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Military moms will tell you so.  They will tell you of kids crying across the country on flights to new homes.  About kids sitting on beds surrounded by boxes announcing with certainty that there are NO friend options in this new place, that it will NEVER be like the last place.  They will tell you about all the encouraging things you counter with, while inside you are secretly thinking the very same things.  

They will also say they know in their heart of hearts that there is always an email, an invitation, a mutual friend, a compassionate new neighbor.  There is always eventually a hand extended in welcome.  We are in that stage right now, reassuring each other and reminding of all those wonderful ways things have fallen together in other places.  EVERY other place.  As wrenching as it always is to leave, there will come a day when the new place is as dear to us.  It is hard to see that on the leaving end, but it is true.  

I have a small chocolate wrapper in my hand to prove it.  

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Pumpkins from the Farm

Visiting the pumpkin patch was a regular occurence this fall since the farm rotated the fields making pumpkins very accessible to us.  There were some varieties we have never seen before which were rather wart-y.  A couple weeks ago they began to harvest.  The crates came in and every evening there were fewer pumpkins as they were trucked off to the seasonal sale patch. They saved us several so tomorrow is the big day finally to decorate. 

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and looking the other direction….

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Of altitude and attitudes

 

Postcards from the Devon coast line.  While we are at it, I thought it might be good to share some insider info about traveling the world with children just to dispel some myths.  Despite the awe-inspiring views and fresh air and majestic surroundings, well traveled kids may not always be as impressed as you are nor as you hope they would be. My friend Jen gave me that head's up when we moved to Germany as her clan was leaving.  She said they do get cathedral'd out.  Sometimes we let them pass. I was shocked.  HOW could they miss this??

But she was right.  It happens. Especially after a long stretch of intense travel. Even good natured, home educated kids who have been steeped in history and geography. They may or may not say things like, how long do you think this is this gonna take?  Will we get to do anything fun after?  Can I bring food? I got some puddle inside my boot. Is there a bathroom out here? He's stepping on the back of my shoes. NETTLES!  When are we gonna actually DO something?  (besides walk and look at places…)

This isn't a sign of failure.  Just par for the course.  And once they get out there they are usually drawn in to the surroundings and forget their complaints.  But not always.  Sometimes they really ARE sure they'd rather  play angry birds or go get gelato or any number of things.  That's when you pull out "You'll thank me someday."    And really mean it.   Because someday they will.  

Meantime, enjoy the view.  It's fleeting.  All of it. : ) 

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nasoni di Roma

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So what's a boy to do when it's 80something in Rome and the water's run out? Well one's mind immediately turns to these….

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and these….

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What are they?  They are nasoni, a slang word for the public fountains all over Rome, which turned out to be more than decorative.

 Yes I see that green stuff.  But for realz, we saw a lot of people doing this….

 

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Even the dogs were in on it.  The dog on the right was playing with his owner at the dog park which is off left and down two stories.  The guy sent him up for a drink and he knew just where to go. 

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So yeah, I caved which is really huge for me.  I can handle a lot of mess in my own home but get REALLY weirded out by other people's germs as a rule.  It turns out though that the water is safe, potable and just a courtesy of the city for the past 2000 yrs. You can even pick up a map plotting out all the nasoni in the city center. Which is way better than paying four euro for a bottle of water.  Kid you not.  

When in Rome….

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walking through Rome and other miscellany

This is the self-guided tour since it's super late here.  After nearly two months of away from the house activities we are bringing our focus back to home.  We have one child who recently arrived on the continent and another who recently left for a short time.  Homecoming weekend took all our energy for the past week and now we are winding up the fall sports season.  Home stretch!  

Home.  It's definition is ever expanding and contracting.   : )

While my energy is there right now I am stealing a few moments to walk through Rome before hitting the hay. Hoping to just keep bringing bits of my random comings and goings to this space as I can for whomever may be out there wandering along. 

 

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Apartment in Rome

I love seeing how other people live around the world so in that spirit I caught a few pictures of the flat we rented in Rome to share with you.  The white walls were so nice.  The white sofa….less nice.  I think I am officially over my white slipcover obsession.  Ok not really but they'd need daily washing in my world and I AM over that. 

It was a wonderful sunny bright space.  Definitely Euro-sized but fabulous for our needs. 

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(elevator going down past the window and from the front, entering)

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