Thursday, March 17, 2016

Our Not-So-Average School Day

Years ago, when I dreamed of raising children, I pictured living near the sea and homeschooling everyone. In those dreams, we ate breakfasts of homemade pancakes, scrambled eggs, and fresh fruit. I slowly sipped my coffee as I admired each of my children around our dining table. There was never any cleaning in my dreams (since they weren’t nightmares), but the assumption was that everyone cheerfully pitched in and the kitchen was clean in a snap. After hitting the books each day, we spent our time exploring the out-of-doors and playing at the beach. Each night, the children would bathe, we’d eat as a family, I’d throw a wild family-pajama-dance party, and we would read together. After tucking each child in, Matt and I would sink into our prudently chosen Coffee Colored Sofa and relish in what a blessing our family was.


Source



Cut to real-time.


Each morning, Matt wakes up early and shuffles the children through their imperative, structured morning routine. During the intensity, I lie in bed pretending to sleep until I hear the front door close. Then I hightail it into our kitchen to ready the french press. After perfectly brewing and pouring my coffee into my favorite mug (because that DOES have an affect on the taste and the pleasure of consumption), I go into my room, close the door and read for every quiet moment I get.


Which is about 13 minutes each morning.


For the rest of the school day, we attempt to learn, casually, as we go through life which is so much more fun, messier, and more exhausting than it ever was in my dreams.  


When I put our youngest down for a nap, I often have to take a break from the fun to advocate for my two children who are in school. Their complex needs due to early childhood trauma impact their educational, medical, extracurricular, and therapeutic needs. I have to ensure they get the structure and nurture they need across settings so they can succeed without being singled out or shamed.


Case management Mommy-style is exhausting so I attempt to be efficient to reserve as much energy as possible for interacting with my treasured family members. I go downstairs and brew a cup of black tea. Then, I  snuggle up with my homeschooler and I read to him for as long as he’ll let me. Sometimes we play a game. Sometimes we just act plain goofy. After we’ve had fun and he feels emotionally connected, he reminds me how secure, healthy, and happy he is by doing an independent project, playing, or reading until his brother wakes up. As he does, I try to remind myself to inhale every minute of this and appreciate that he currently doesn’t have toxic stress weighing him down. He’s free to be a child. It’s a beautiful gift and one I now know not to take for granted.


When our little man wakes, he’s the most relaxed he ever is and I try to capitalize on that by reading to him. While I’ve attempted to interest him in more sophisticated children’s literature, he typically convinces me to read same “Thomas the Tank Engine Story Time” book. I’m learning to appreciate how interested he is in the actual mechanics of trains. His second go-to book is “The First Human Body Encyclopedia,” because learning how the digestive system works is even more interesting than how trains work. Because. Poop. If there were more than two pages devoted to excretion, I’m certain the encyclopedia would replace his current number one.


When we do school pick-up, we stay to do homework so one child can attend his school-provided tutoring and so both my children who need it can keep schoolwork at school.


On our way out of school, we race and the kids hide from me and “scare” me. I scream, to their delight. Then we shuffle into our ultra-cool minivan and I pass out dinner to my two children who feel immediate relief once they get their physical needs met. When we get home, we begin the calming predictable routine that results in at least two of the children being tucked into their beds consistently at the exact same time each evening. They wind down in their beds as I play cherished audio books outside their bedroom door.


By the time Matt arrives home, I’m done. I’ve sunk into the sofa before he’s changed his clothes. Sometimes I scan the mess around me and choose to close my eyes and try to remind myself all the reasons my reality is better than my previous dreams.


For me, enjoying the simple things is more possible in my reality than it ever was in my dreams because I’m acquainted with the complex.

While true, it’s still best appreciated with my eyes closed.

12 comments :

  1. Your school day sounds like mine, minus the homeschooling. Bless you for having that patience!!

    I like how your post ended; it rings true for me as well.

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    1. Thanks, Lynn. A couple years ago, one of my kids told me Tigers close their eyes to be happy. I was SO getting it, until I read his book that said, "Tigers close their eyes WHEN they're happy." We are still working on reading comprehension, but I continue to close my eyes to be happy. A lot.

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  2. Based on the coffee cup thing and the sneaked reading moments, I am quite certain we are twins.

    And oh, boy, do I love what you said about the complex. Like you, my dreams turned out nothing like my reality. The complexity makes it so much richer.

    Lovely post, Nicole!

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    1. Thanks, Lori! I cannot believe you get the coffee thing! Matt is sure I'm a sandwich short of a picnic (which I may be, but I don't think that has anything to do with my coffee preferences).

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  3. You are so funny and endearing at the same time. This post really touched my heart. I used to dream of having a house by the ocean too. But when I close my eyes and think about my crazy life with 4 kids, you are so right...it's better than my previous dreams (tears). And by the way...your idea to play audio books outside of their bedrooms--genius! Do you use an ap? I could have saved a lot of repetition telling the kids to get back in bed over and over for all these years! So glad you shared this at #100HappyDays!

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    1. Thanks, Valerie! I'm so glad you can relate. We are SO old-school (and cheap). We bought a CD player (for something like $20) and play it outside the kids' room. We check the audio CD's out from our local library. While I still love reading to my kids, it's a great way for them to calm down at night.

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  4. Thanks for the read. Your writing is so good it brought me in to your life for a moment and gave me an appreciation for it. Your coffee colored couch is beautiful :)

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    1. Thanks, Oshea! One of these days I'm going to be reading about your life. It's so fun to connect this way.

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  5. I love this. Rarely is our life the one of our earlier dreams, and that's ok, because being able to touch this life and breathe it, is way better. It's harder, and easier, and calmer and more frantic. But I never could have imagined how full of love it would be. And it sounds like yours is the same. I wish that we didn't have all of the pitfalls, but it's taught me more about myself, how I believe and how I want to be there for others. There is also a humility, when your eyes are opened to things that you never knew existed, and you just want to touch them, hug them and make it all better.

    I can't wait to read more of your journey. And I hope that tomorrow's 13 minutes is enough time for you to recharge, and the 13 after that and after that.

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    1. Thank you, Nikki. I do hope we'll connect in the future. I deprived myself of sleep this morning to get my 13 minutes. The sleep deprivation is worth it.

      You're right, life never plays out as we dreamed. But, looking back, my dreams were boring compared to my actual life.

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  6. I love your post and it's honesty. Life is never exactly how we imagine, sometimes better, sometimes worse, always messy (at least my house) and always an adventure! I completely get the coffee mug thing as well. My best friend just yesterday asked if I was okay with using the panda mug... The panda mug would have been fine except it had a weird handle. And coffee is never as good in a mug with a weird handle! She knew the answer to the question before she'd even asked lol

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    1. I TOTALLY get the weird handle thing! Growing up, my mom had a mug with a hollow handle. I couldn't drink hot chocolate without burning my hand. This may be where my picky-coffee-mug issue started. Wonder how many issues my kids are going to try to blame on me.

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