When Marriage Works

I am tempting the fates by writing this post, I feel it.  Maybe tomorrow I will come home to Mary Tyler Dad and his mistress stretched out across my favorite bedding found at a trunk show in Soho and purchased for next to nothing. Maybe he will start to send flowers for no known reason.  Maybe he will suddenly have business travel on weekends in sunny locales like Hawaii and Catalina Freaking Island.  Maybe he has a family shacked up somewhere in the suburbs.

Maybe, but I don’t think so.

My marriage seems to work.  (I am writing this at Panera and people are now staring blanky as I run around knocking on every piece of wood in my sight line.)  Sunday we celebrated twelve years together.  A dozen years of wedded functionality, if not pure bliss.  Hell, I’ll take function over bliss any day, especially when those days stretch into 4,382 in number.

Wedding 3

I love my husband.  I love him more today than the day I married him.  I love him more today than the day I sat across him at a diner eating pancakes, which is the exact moment when I knew I would marry him.  He didn’t know it for a few more years, but I did.  I knew it.

What a lucky gal I am.

Our marriage isn’t perfect.  Every relationship takes work to sustain itself, but the work we put into us feels not so much like work, but a vocation.  Work that is meaningful and reaps the most amazing rewards.  I am so very grateful to find a love who knows me, sees me, forgives me, values me.

On Sunday I spent some time going through wedding photos.  We looked so young.  Our faces were free of stress and full of naivete.  They are beautiful faces.  I recognize them and even missed those young faces for a moment. Today our faces are a shade wider, my husband’s hairline a shade higher, but we still look at each other with love.

Wedding 1

The song we chose for our ceremony was “Come Rain Or Come Shine” (Johnny Mercer and Harold Arlen).  Words are so important to both of us. They factored heavily in our wedding, even down to the blue embroidery that ran along my wedding dress hem.  Words have always mattered to us.  I think, maybe, that is why we don’t hurt one another with them very often.

I’m gonna love you like nobody’s loved you, come rain or come shine
High as a mountain and deep as a river, come rain or come shine
I guess when you met me it was just one of those things
But don’t ever bet me cause I’m gonna be true if you let me

You’re gonna love me like nobody’s loved me, come rain or come shine
Happy together, unhappy together and won’t it be fine?
Days may be cloudy or sunny
We’re in or we’re out of the money.

But I’ll love you always, I’m with you rain or shine

Rain or shine.

Those words are a promise from one love to another, much like the laminated wedding vows we carry in our wallets.  We had no illusions on our wedding day.  Eyes wide open, you know?  We entered our marriage knowing life is hard, relationships are hard — how hard, we had no way to realize, but we were game.

Wedding 2

We know things now I wish we never knew, things we can never unknow, but those things — the deep and profound understanding of being in hell, but being there together, holding hands close and tight — to have that knowledge about your love, that they will be there with you no matter what, is the most amazing comfort I have ever known.  It holds me every day, just like my husband.  I am profoundly grateful for that knowledge, that knowing.

Happy anniversary, my love.  I love you still, even more than before.  May we always remember the day we chose one another.  May we keep choosing one another every day.  

Wedding 4

(All photos courtesy of Sandra Goldfield Photography)

The No Hit, No Kick Club

When Mary Tyler Son turned four something else turned, too, and not for the best.  The sweetest, gentlest, dinosaur loving, Greek myth reading, little boy became . . . how do I put this gently . . . aggressive.  AGGRESSIVE.  Hitting, kicking, in your face aggressive.  Unpleasantly so, too.  I checked the warranty, but it had expired.  Dammit.  We were gonna have to figure this one out on our own.

We tried time outs.  He would extend them to six minutes, just to show us that they didn’t matter.  We tried removing favored toys.  He found other favored toys.  We tried eliminating screen time.  Well, I gotta say, that one sucked more for me than for Mary Tyler Son.  Why was I being punished for his aggressive behavior?   Harumph.

And let me add at this point in time, any of you who feel the need to question my parenting tactics, have at it.  Judge away, Judgey McJudgersons.  This gig is tough and I will be the first to admit that I don’t have all the answers.  Suggest away, too, as maybe you found the elusive method I have been looking for.  What you can’t do is say what a terrible, horrible no good very bad son my boy is.  Or, you know, this:

“my daughter would never hit or kick. she never has been taught how to hurt someone. grateful for having given birth to a little girl with a soul thats peaceful and not full of anger and violence.”

Yeah, under no circumstances should you ever suggest that another person’s child has a soul full of anger and violence because they are going through an aggressive phase.  That ain’t cool.  You know how I know that?  Because I get to be with my boy 24/7.  The same boy who hits and kicks also kisses dandelions and tulips with his own two lips.  The same boy who hits and kicks also likes to share his banana bread — the really good bite with extra chocolate chips.  The same boy who hits and kicks also stretches his arms out first thing in the morning to get the first of many hugs of the day.

So, just so we’re on the same page, sharing your own hard earned experience with managing hitting and kicking and all around aggressive behavior is most welcome.  Condemning my son’s soul ain’t cool.

Where was I?

Oh, yeah — the No Hit, No Kick Club.  Mary Tyler Son’s aggressive behavior wasn’t escalating, but it wasn’t getting any better either.  I brought it up at the spring parent-teacher conference and his teacher assured us he had no aggressive behavior in the classroom.  Whew.  She also told us about the testosterone surge that occurs in four year old boys.  What’s that you say?

I came home and Googled, “testosterone surge in four year old boys.”  Most of the scientific evidence comes out of New Zealand (I blame the Kiwi love of hokey pokey), but there are tons and tons and tons of bulletin posts from frustrated and worried parents all describing exactly what I was seeing in my very own four year old little boy.  Sweet boys who are seemingly transformed overnight into loud, hitting, kicking, grumpy machines.  Oddly, not a single parent worried over the state of their son’s soul.

I was raised in an authoritarian Irish Catholic home.  Never in a hundred years would I have considered hitting or kicking my parents.  Not a freaking chance.  I knew, intuitively, that adults were off limits.  We sat quietly in church, too.  It was a non-issue.  If my Dad were to give advice, he would say, “He needs a little pat on the popo.”  Well, I love my Dad fiercely, but we simply agree to disagree on this one.  Popos are off limits.

I do, though, see red when my boy hits, kicks, or defies us so blatantly.  In my head I think, “That’s just not done.”  Somehow, what is crystal clear in my head is not so clear to Mary Tyler Son.  So, yeah, the hits and kicks and grumpy behavior continued despite our consistent parenting.

Mary Tyler Son’s teacher suggested reward over punishment.  What’s this you say?  At first, that sounded like crazy talk to my Irish Catholic authoritarian tendencies.  Reward this son of mine for not hitting or kicking me?  That seemed cray to the zee.

But one day, after another session of the boy’s hitting and kicking and me shaming, “How on earth could you hit your mother?  Your Mother?!” I knew I needed a new tactic.  In that moment was born the No Hit, No Kick Club.

It was decided that for every day without hits or kicks, Mary Tyler Son would earn a sticker.  With seven consecutive stickers, a new toy would be rewarded.  I opted for a stash of $4-6 Playmobile figures, none of which he had seen before.  I showed one to him as incentive and left it front and center on the kitchen counter.  He liked it.  He smiled.  He was excited.  Let’s do this.

I made a chart and posted a photo of it on Facebook, cause everything of worth happens on Facebook, right?  Not one, but two moms I really admire and respect told me flat out that seven days was too many.  One just happened to be my mother-in-law, who also happens to be a child psychologist.  When a child psychologist/mother-in-law suggests something, it’s prudent to listen.  And I did, but I had also already established the rules with the boy, so it felt not so cool to adjust coming out of the gate.

First day, success, sticker!  Second day, hitting, no sticker.  Third day, success, sticker!  Fourth day, hitting, no sticker.  NEW RULE!  Three days with consecutive stickers would earn a toy.  Mary Tyler Son liked the new rule, and sure enough, he racked up three stickers in the next three days!  Toy!  He liked it!  He racked up another three days and got another toy!  Wow.  I am a genius.  This No Hit, No Kick Club rules!

No Hit No Kick Club

BAM.  With seven stickers in a row, and me commenting on that and suggesting we might extend the reward to five days, the hitting came back.  Mary Tyler Son was devastated.  He hit the next day, too, early in the morning, which seemed to give him free license to spend the day hitting and kicking, since it was already a no sticker day.  Boo.

We’re back on track now and today looks like it will make three days in a row with stickers.  I’m not holding my breath on that one, and I sure as hell am not telling him about it before bed time.  The jury is still out on the No Hit, No Kick Club, but we’re gonna keep at it for a while.

No doubt, though, I’ve doomed it after breaking the first rule of the No Hit, No Kick Club.  Shhhhh.  Don’t tell Mary Tyler Son.

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A Letter to the Moms of Newtown on Mother’s Day

Your kids have not been forgotten.  I think about you and them most every day.  December 14 will always hold a new significance for me and so many others.  The day that changed your life forever, making it at times seem unrecognizable, no doubt, has in some small way touched me, too.  I am so very sorry for what was so brutally taken from you on that day — your child and your innocence.

Mother’s Day is Sunday.  My guess is that this is not a day of joy or celebration for you.  You will not be fussing over where to get brunch or wishing you had more time for yourself.  You probably have too much time for yourself these days.  Too much time to think and feel and mourn.  There may be no comforting you this first Mother’s Day without your child.

You probably see the commercials, hear the ads touting the question, “What’s for Mom this Mother’s Day?”  Buy this necklace!  Eat our food!  Smell our flowers!  It can be oppressive.  I, too, have a young child that is not with me on this day.  She is gone for entirely different reasons, illness and not violence.  But her absence gives me a glimpse into the loss you may feel and how the frequent reminders of MOTHER’S DAY we see and hear do nothing more than turn up the volume of our grief.

I pledge not to forget you or your children.  I pledge to recognize the impact their violent death has had on me.  I pledge to reject the belief that standing in solidarity with mothers who are mourning the loss of their child from guns is somehow a political statement.  I pledge to remember what was taken from you on December 14, 2012.

Charlotte Bacon

Daniel Barden

Olivia Engel

Josephine Gay

Ana Marquez-Greene

Dylan Hockley

Madeleine Hsu

Catherine Hubbard

Chase Kowalski

Jesse Lewis

James Mattioli

Grace McDonnell

Emilie Parker

Jack Pinto

Noah Pozner

Caroline Previdi

Jessica Rekos

Avielle Richman

Benjamin Wheeler

Allison Wyatt

It is so important to say the names, your child’s name.  May you always speak them, because if you don’t, no one will.  May you find a way to honor them and their years on this earth.  May you only know compassion as you figure out how to move forward without your child.

That, I fear, will be the tricky part.  In the days after December 14, people everywhere, moms especially, were stricken by what happened in the halls and classrooms of Sandy Hook Elementary.  It was unfathomable.  We held our kids tighter, fed them ice cream for dinner, showered them with the kisses you yourself could no longer dole out.  We cried on those first days dropping them off at school, worried if they would be safe, wondering if any of us would ever feel safe again.

And then, like life, we moved on.  Dinners needed to be made, clothes needed to be cleaned and folded, bills needed to be paid, groceries needed buying.  Life moved on, as it always does, even in the most devastating of times.  I still see you.  Despite the dinners I make, the clothes I fold, the bills I pay, the groceries I buy.  Despite the busy-ness of my days, I see you.  I remember you.  I will not forget.  That life moving on business is yet another of the cruel things you have encountered.

Somehow your children, with their backpacks and soccer balls and art smocks, have become symbols for all of America, a dividing line of sorts, in the proverbial sands of gun legislation.  Politics has overtaken the empathy.  For that I am truly and deeply sorry, ashamed almost.  I know your children are so much more than symbols.  I wish everyone understood that.  I am sorry if this national discussion your tragedy has sparked diminishes them in any way.  Your children and their lives are so much more than a tipping point.

Be strong, mothers of Newtown.  Choose hope.  Choose to believe that your grief will not always be so consuming.  Choose to honor your children in whatever way makes sense to you.  Choose to understand that allowing laughter and love and light into your lives will in no way dishonor your child’s memory.  My wish for you is the same thing I wish for myself and all mothers missing a child on Mother’s Day.  Peace, strength, hope, joy, and love.  These are the things that will nudge you forward, not away from your grief, but in a more comfortable spot within your grief.

I see you this Mother’s Day, and I remember your children.  

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