Iron Man Has Nothing on This Iron Woman

Today is a good day for Robert Downey, Jr. fans.  Iron Man 3 opens.  That’s cool, right?  You get to see People’s Most Beautiful Woman play opposite my second ex-husband in what is sure to be an epic-ly cool special effects blockbuster.  But I know something cooler and someone cooler.  And she needs our help.

Kristin McQueen is a neighbor in Cancerville.  She is a super cool neighbor.  One of those folks that when you meet her, you feel all awkward and odd, kind of like you are meeting a rock star or royalty.  Kristin is sort of a legend in Cancerville.  And no doubt, she doesn’t feel cool, or like a rock star.  Thing is, cancer came calling for Kristin.  She didn’t set out to inspire those of us who are inspired by her.  Kristin is just living her life in the face of cancer.  Plain and simple.

Ten years ago Kristin was diagnosed with metastatic thyroid cancer.  In the last decade she has had 15 major surgeries and her most recent was just this week, her 10th brain surgery.  Add to that two rounds of radiation, which can no longer be used as her cancer is now resistant to it; nerve damage; vision loss; vertigo; chronic pain.  Yeah, cancer has not been kind to Kristin.  Cancer can suck it.

Kristin doing her thing.  Run like the wind, girl.
Kristin doing her thing. Run like the wind, girl.

Despite everything that has come her way, Kristin is an athlete and a competitor.  She is fierce.  I’m serious.  I whine about thirty minutes on the treadmill and here Kristin is doing her thing.  Racing and running are her get out of Cancerville free card.  When she is running, she is in control, not cancer.  She gets to call the shots, not cancer.  I can’t tell you enough how important finding that coping mechanism is.  For me, it is writing and words and connecting with you.  For Kristin, it is competing.  To date, she has run in 17 marathons and 9 Ironman competitions.  Good Freaking Lord, the woman is a beast. She says it best herself:

“Ironman is so much more than an endurance race. It is not about simply propelling myself 140.6 miles for kicks, it’s about challenging my limits and seeing what’s possible. It’s about reclaiming my body after 5 neck surgeries, 2 rounds of radiation, 10 brain surgeries and a slew of acquired physical challenges. It’s about not giving into all the limitations that cancer and its buddies have imposed on me, but viewing them as challenges that ultimately make the race even sweeter by overcoming them. It’s about going from not being able to open my eyes without getting sick, having difficulty sitting upright and being too weak to stand by myself to completing one of the ultimate tests of human endurance. It’s about raising money so that nobody else has to go through what I have. It’s about remembering those who have passed and honoring those who fight every day to live a “normal” life despite a disease that tries to tear them down.”

And this is where YOU come in.  Are you ready?

Kristin wants to compete in the 2013 Ironman Championship in Kona, Hawaii.  You have to qualify to participate in this competition.  These are hard core athletes competing in Kona.  Kristin wants to be one of them.  Kona has opened up seven slots for folks voted into the competition.  The theme of the contest is “Anything is Possible.” And honestly?  Anyone would be hard pressed to demonstrate the power of possibility better than Kristin McQueen.

She wants to win one of these slots.  We can help her, easily.  Here’s what you need to do in three easy steps:

  1. Watch this video;
  2. Vote for Kristin every day between now and May 7, 2013;
  3. Tell your friends and neighbors on all your social media feeds.

See?  Easy-peasy-lemon squeezy!  So much easier than cancer.  So much easier than running marathons or competing in Ironmans.  We can sit on our sofas and do something good today.  With the click of a button, we can help an outstanding human being faced with ridiculous struggles (but managing them with grace and grit  — a lot like Donna), to achieve her dream.

Easy-peasy-lemon freaking squeezy.  

Musings of a New Soccer Mom

My boy has been going through a rough patch as of late.  He is the type of kid that when I tell folks that his behavior has been kind of, sort of challenging in the past few months they look at me like I have two heads. “Not Mary Tyler Son!  It’s not possible!”  Thing is, it is possible, and it is hard as hell, and it hurts, and makes me feel like I am being a bad parent.

NOTE:  For the record, these two reactions to what I am about to write are not welcome here.  If you find yourself having one or both of said reactions, do me a solid and STOP reading.  Reactions that will not be tolerated are:  a) “What a brat!  You need to give that kid some physical discipline!  If you don’t you’re as good as raising a serial killer.  Just sayin’,” and b) “You have no right to discuss your kid’s behavior in such a public forum.  That is cruel and unusual punishment and you are a bad parent.  Just sayin’.”

Whew.  Glad that’s done.

There have been some changes in our boy the past few months.  He is more aggressive, less willing to do as told when told, demanding, etc.  From what I hear, this is typical four year old behavior.  His teacher educated us about the hormonal surges that occur in boys at this age, effectively doubling his testosterone level in a matter of months.  Google confirms.  So, yeah, the kid’s behavior has been challenging and I seem to be getting the brunt of it.

Yesterday was no exception.  It was a beautiful, warm, early Spring day in Chicago.  I was a wee bit excited for Mary Tyler Son to take his very first soccer class.  Yes, yesterday I officially became a Soccer Mom (cue the marketers).  This felt really significant to me as this week marks the week that my boy has outlived his sister.  As of Tuesday, our boy is older than Donna ever got to be.  I feel in my bones that somewhere, this is making Donna really, really happy.  For me, it’s complicated.  While I rejoice in our boy’s health and development — he is reading!  he is writing!  — these are all milestones that Donna never got to and it reminds me in a very concrete way of her loss.

You get where I am going with this?  My sadness over Donna’s death and absence in our lives coupled with the oppression of our boy’s testosterone fueled tantrums makes me a wee bit overwhelmed these days.

Cut to yesterday.  We were driving to the first soccer class of the season.  A momentous occasion, at least in my head.  I can’t burden the boy with the significance of his first soccer class, what it means to his mama, but there we were.  He conked out about ten minutes away from the class.  Snooze City.  I knew that didn’t bode well.  He had expressed some ambivalence about going as he has recently discovered that while he might be the brightest kid he knows, he is not the fastest or most physically nimble.  That is getting him down and he has shed a few tears about it.

When we got there, I woke the boy as gently as possible.  Sure enough, there were tears and protestations and demands to be carried.  I don’t know much, but I know that you don’t want to be carrying your four year old kid, clinging to you for dear life, into his very first soccer class.

We had the coming to Jesus talk — he needed to get it together and quick.  It was time for class, class was starting, we were going to class.  “NOOOOOOOOO!  I am NOT going to class and you can’t make me!”  Well, actually, son, I can.  I kept my calm, told him how this was gonna happen, and started walking.  He followed, but continued to protest, “I WILL NOT PLAY SOCCER!  I WILL SIT THERE AND YOU CAN’T MAKE ME PLAY!”  True and hard to argue with that.  I could make him go, but I couldn’t make him play.

When we found the gym, Coach Mike was just starting.  About ten little ones were standing in a circle, ready to rumble.  I did a quick assessment, being our first class and all.  No parents allowed in the gym.  Dammit.  I told my boy I would go in with him and sit at the sidelines.  He refused to go in.  Loudly.  Not wanting to disrupt the class that was just getting ready to start, I pulled the boy aside for another chat.  This was something the boy would have to do on his own.  End of story.  I would be right there, at the door, waiting for him, but I could not go in.  The tears started, he lost his words — this most verbal of boys was reduced to whimpers and sad sounds that a puppy being hit makes.  As stated, he was NOT going to play.

I sat down by the door myself, informing Mary Tyler Son that we would not be leaving.  It was time for soccer and that is where we would be.  It is difficult to set limits with a young child, but setting those limits in the presence of ten other parents that you don’t know whose kids are all cooperating in a way yours is not is harder.  Sigh.  Mary Tyler Son dug his heels in.  He would NOT PLAY.  He upped the ante by starting to play slap me — slapping me, but with no force, just to make a point, it seemed, that he was “hitting” me.  Hitting is a no-no in our home and calls for immediate time outs.

The boy was testing me.

I sat there and took it.  I blocked every slap and returned his slaps with a firm “NO.”  I also quietly, but assertively informed the boy that we would be coming to soccer every Wednesday for the next eight weeks.  Yes, we would.  More cries, more protests, more slaps, more evidence that the boy was hurting about something, but completely overwhelmed and unable to express exactly what.

About twenty minutes into class, Mary Tyler Son told me he would go into class when the soccer balls came out.  The first bit was just spent warming up an running around.  I told him it didn’t work that way.  You can’t choose when you will go in and what you would do — being part of a class means doing as the class does.  He frowned and whimpered again, but inched closer to the door.  He was curious.  This was good.

More inching followed by a swift retreat back to the comfort of my lap followed by head up and more curiosity about what the kids were doing now.

Suddenly, all the kids ran out into the hallway for a drink of water.  Mary Tyler Son turned to me with a bright smile and said, “This is a great time to enter the class!”  YES, I told him, it was.  Coach Mike was welcoming.  The boy ran into class and did his thing.  Wow.  What had just happened?  What changed?

Mary Tyler Son enjoyed the hell out of the rest of the class.  He ran and kicked and smiled and waved.  He was having fun.  Capital ‘F’ Fun.  I was so, so proud of him.  Truth be told, I was proud of me, too.  We had gotten through a really difficult moment together.  I wanted to cut and run, I did.  I wanted to leave that gym and escape the judgmental stares of ten parents whose kids were not struggling.  I wanted to banish screen time for a month because of the humiliation my boy caused me.  But I didn’t.  I sat.  I, too, dug in my heels.

After class, he came running out, “Did you see me?  Did you see me?  I LOVE SOCCER!”  I saw you, honey.  You were magnificent.  About 90% of the cells in my body were distracted by my lost phone, but my boy didn’t care about my lost phone.  And it wasn’t his problem.  We needed to celebrate and be together and enjoy his victory.  Despite me wanting to run to the car to check on a phone that may or may not be there, we went to the park instead.  And we played.  And I forgot about the phone.  I didn’t forget, actually, I just said, “Pffffft.  What can be done?  If it’s gone, it’s gone.”

My phone had been lost and found, and apparently, so had my parenting fortitude.  I am proud of both my boy and I.  It was a tough situation, but ended well.  Sometimes, our kids need to tow the line, but we need to be willing to hold the line.  And neither of those things are easy.

Screen Break Week: Day Two

So I’m sitting here with Mary Tyler Dad, dueling computers at the dining room table, and I says, “So was this whole Screen Break Week my idea or your idea?”  And he says to me, “The school’s idea, right?  Aren’t they pushing it?”  Well, if by “pushing it” you mean leaving a little pamphlet in Mary Tyler Son’s cubbie in school, well then, yes, it was the school.  So it seems that I was the instigator by taking said pamphlet and actually reading it and leaving it out in the open.  Sigh.

Didn't a pamphlet start the American Revolution?
Didn’t a pamphlet start the American Revolution?

Mary Tyler Dad likes himself a screen as well as the next guy, don’t get me wrong, but he’s also pushing for us to drop cable.  That idea, though noble, fiscally responsible, and the right thing to do, gives me the heebie jeebies.  I LOVE ME SOME SCREENS.  All of them.  I love all the screens!  I love my television and my computer and my iPad (I may have two, possibly) and my iPhone.  I LOVE ALL THE SCREENS!

Deep breathing . . .

Okay. Anyway.  Screen Break Weak.  I mean Week.  Screen Break Week.  Without a lot of conversation, we agreed to give this a go.  Sadly, we had differing ideas of what a “break” meant.  We are like the Ross and Rachel of middle aged parents.  I assumed a break meant for the boy, but clearly, obviously, not for the parents.  I mean we are grown ups, for cripes sakes.  Mary Tyler Dad was taking the high road and assumed it would be for all of us.  WHAT IN THE HELL WAS HE THINKING?

Well, we cleared that little misunderstanding up about one hour and forty-five minutes into Screen Break Week when I used the iPad to show the boy a YouTube video of a slam dunk contest.  Thing is, if you aren’t using screens, you best plan yourself some activities.  There are only so many Ninjago sets you can pant after in a Lego catalog before you begin to start karate chopping every animate and inanimate object in your home.  Assuming you are a four year old boy with a screen not available to him.  One of our afternoon activities was a slam dunk contest.  Cool, right?

So I planned an afternoon of activities for us outside the house.  As a family.  Family fun activities!  Sigh.  I got a lot of complaints from the little one and a blank stare from the big one, but it was decided.  When I reached for the iPad to help the kid get familiar with one of those said activities, my husband and I squabbled about the use of the screen.  He thought screen break meant screen free.  No screens.  All week.  Ha!  I am still laughing about that one.  I countered that screen break meant no screens for the little one for entertainment purposes, and limited screens for us, especially in the presence of said little one.

Truth is, I work from home.  I can only do that work on a screen.  It is that screen that connects me to everything in the world outside our walls.  There is no more office for me to go to.  No 8-10 hours of subsidized Facebook for my anymore.  Nosiree, Bob!  I need a screen.  My take was that as long as the screen was being used as a tool, even in the presence of the little one, it had to be okay.  Had to be.  This was a deal breaker for me.  Give me a break, am I right?  How else to describe a slam dunk to a four year old who has never watched a basketball game in his life. That led to the argument, really.

Mary Tyler Dad thought I was sending the wrong message to the boy if the only way I could explain a slam dunk was through a screen.  That, in essence, the screens in our life had become a crutch.  I call BS on that one.  There is a difference between using the screen as a reference tool, a sleek and completely modern reference tool, albeit, and using a screen as a babysitter.  Which I never do.  Ever.  Never, ever, ever.  Nope, note me.  Move along, Judgy McJudgersons.

Anyway. So here we are, two days into Screen Break Weak.  WEEK.  Mary Tyler Dad and I are finally on the same page.  Well. definitely in the same chapter.  And we’re doing okay.  On some level, it’s been a lot more challenging for the two adults in the house than our little one.  He is still at that age that he has to do as we say, you know?  And he takes most all of his cues from his parents.  If we’re okay, he’s okay.  If we’re cranky, well then, he will definitely feed into that dynamic.

Yesterday we got through the morning, our argument, and had a pretty nice day out as a family.  We went to a local library that had open Lego time.  That kind of, sort of blew Mary Tyler Son away.  He got to play Legos with a table full of 7-8 year old boys.  He was in heaven.  And they didn’t make fun of him once.  And actually seemed pretty interested in his opinions on Ninjago minifigs.

The boy was sulky and annoyed when it was time to leave for the slam dunk exhibition, but whatever.  Transitions are always tough on this little guy.  We had a great time.  That was supremely cool.  Like so cool.  Those guys were awesome.  Aside from the fact that they were the official slam dunk team for the WNBA’s Chicago Sky and they all had penises, they were awesome.  Do women not slam dunk?  Honest question:  If you’re a 6 foot plus WNBA player, don’t you dunk?

We finished up there, had a nice dinner out, and came home.  The boy started landing on his little toddler bed after simulated slam dunks and it was hilarious.  All was good.  He fell asleep after the night’s chapter of Little House in the Big Woods.  Day One over.

Day Two started our loudly.  And roughly.  Seemingly, not watching screens gives a little boy more testosterone.  This morning he was rough and tumble.  I shivered a little when Mary Tyler Dad left for work.  We needed a plan.  And quick.  We ended up spending the day at Ikea, looking for “big boy” bedroom furniture.  Having grown almost an inch since Christmas, it’s time.  He loved it.  I loved it.  All was good.

A screen!  A screen!  A screen!  A pink, cardboard screen!
A screen! A screen! A screen! A pink, cardboard screen!

To celebrate, Mary Tyler Son got a new Lego set.  It’s cool.  The deal was that we would buy it today and assemble it sometime later this week.  Yeah, right.  Giving a four year old a cool new toy and then telling him to wait until tomorrow?  Not my best parenting decision.  That made him furious and all that new found testosterone came roaring back.  He settled down and we ended up having a nice evening with the neighbor girls who we were watching for a few hours.

Two days in and I think we’ll make it.  There are lessons to be learned here.  Ideally, for me, my goal with Screen Break Week is to do a better job of balancing working from home and mothering from home.  My go to activity when I have to zip something out quickly is a screen.  It is.  I’m not proud of that.  But it is what it is.  I need to develop different strategies for engaging my boy and he needs to meet me half way.

Alright.  End of day and I am beat.  I’ll do a wrap up at week’s end.  Wish us luck.  And if you don’t want to miss any of our hilarious adventures as a family, subscribe to this here blog.  Do it!  Now — even during Screen Break Week!

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