Tag Archives: both/and

My Love of Children?

“I don’t like kids.” This is my response when anything kid-related comes up—Vacation Bible School, babysitting, homeschooling, school field trips. Please, please, please don’t put me in charge of a bunch of kids. I don’t know what to do when they fight, or when they won’t be quiet in a group setting, or when they say a bad word, or cry, or have an allergic reaction. I don’t know what to say when one person gets left out or when there’s drama over seating arrangements.

Truth be told, I’m a little scared. I’m afraid of not having the “right” answer to all the little and big things that come up. This is likely a form of decision paralysis. (I didn’t know I had decision paralysis until my counselor asked me if I did, and I was unable to answer yes or no.) I’m afraid I’ll do something a parent doesn’t approve of, or that a kid will ignore my instructions and I won’t know how to enforce what I’ve said.

Simply put, I’m afraid of me. I lack confidence in my ability to relate to and care for children, and I’m scared of letting myself down or letting a kid down or letting another parent down. I watch my friends parent any kid that is in front of them—resolving conflict, redirecting wild energy, correcting selfish behavior—and I am amazed. I feel anxious in those scenarios with my own children, let alone someone else’s.

Imagine my surprise when I accidentally discovered I love children. I was following a writing prompt from Julia Cameron’s book, Write for Life. My assignment was to complete this sentence ten times: “What I’d really like to write about is …”

After my first four answers, the next phrase that came to mind was, “… my love of children.” Surely someone had injected a foreign thought into my vein of thoughts. I almost dismissed it and moved on, but it insisted on being written down. So I wrote, “What I’d really like to write about is my love of children.” Then I added two question marks to make it clear I didn’t take full ownership of that answer. I finished the list without any more rogue thoughts.

The second part of the exercise was to choose one item on my list and write about it for five minutes. I chose number five, my love of children. Here’s what I wrote.

I love the children I know.

I love their faces, their voices, their giggles and tears.

I love the questions they ask, and the answers they give.

I love their trust, accepting help with hair-brushing and snack-opening and shoe-tying.

I love their creativity.

I love the drawings and crafts they give me, and how we can be fast friends after one stick of gum broken in half and shared.

I love their bird-nest hair and their smooth braided hair.

I love how they fart in their sleep, and talk in their sleep, and complain about how “terrible” they slept, just like a grownup.

I love the way they hug, with vulnerable hearts and trusting bodies.

I love the ways they imitate—words, TV shows, other kids, parents, animals.

I had no idea.

This exercise gave me permission to exist in both spheres: the one where I don’t like kids, and the one where I love kids. I experience the same fears of myself and of the countless moments that require wisdom or intervention, but at the same time I enjoy a new awareness that I love the kids I know. I really, really love them. And I like them too.

“Contradictions”

I eat ice cream, and spinach. I wear cotton, and polyester. I go to church, and theaters. I smile, and I grimace. I buy local organic vegetables, and clothes made in Vietnam. I tell my kids to hurry up, and to slow down. Am I crazy?

Perhaps I should take a stand for church, and against Hollywood. Maybe I should stop frowning. Smiling releases dopamine and endorphins. Frowning doesn’t. When my kids disobey, I’ll smile. When my husband is decompressing from work stress, I’ll smile. When my friend is telling me about her divorce, I’ll smile. When I’m angry, I’ll smile? A one-size-fits-all facial expression almost sounds simple and straightforward, but in the end it would complicate my life.

Most folks agree that a balanced diet (whatever that means) is also wise. Vegetables, ice cream, whole grains, and french fries coexist in our weekly intake of food. Fortunately, we have nice little pyramids and diagrams that tell us how much to eat from each food group. I haven’t found one of those for emotions. Or for what percentage of my clothes should be cotton and American-made.

I have watched people try to define God. I have participated in this endeavor. It feels good to know what side God is on. Have the right answer. Settle in. But the more I get to know God, the more I get bumped around, and the more it looks like there are many answers to the same question. Perhaps life with God is more like this: “The wind blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit.” (John 3:8, NKJV)

A dear friend said to me, “God is pro life and pro choice.” My mind wasn’t sure what to do with that, but my spirit shouted YES! Of course God is pro life and pro choice. God doesn’t choose between babies and their mothers. He chooses babies and their mothers. God stands in the middle when humans say there is no middle. Isn’t the cross the ultimate middle? How could God be connected with humans? Creator with created? Sin with perfection? And yet, somehow, sin and perfection came together on the cross. “For He made Him who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.” (2 Corinthians 5:21, NKJV)

God is a bit crazy, but I like His crazy. I could look into this for the rest of my life, and I think it’s worth looking into.

Degrees of Comfort

Degrees of Comfort

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for cold,
without which I would not know
the comfort of warmth.

Blessed are You
for frosty eyelashes,
toes numbing,
breath visible;
for gloved hand cupping heat against my nose,
tingle of warmed water on cold lips.

Blessed are You
for autumn, crisp apples and air,
for quiet of winter snow,
rushing, melting spring,
giving way to still, hot summer.

Blessed are You
for burning sun,
my skin hot to touch,
breeze over sweat,
the relief of shade,
comfort of cool grass on bare feet.

Blessed are You,
Lord our God,
King of the Universe,
for heat,
without which I would not know
the comfort of cool.