Thursday, March 29, 2012

Gardening with kids

Best flower. Ever.
In celebration of spring... here's a little piece on trying to garden with children that I wrote back when the kids were smaller and drove me madder....

The only way to get any gardening done is to do so under the guise of a game.

This is a fine line. Be careful not to scare them off by throwing a bag of grass seed on their backs too quickly. Make them earn this privilege. It’s all about presentation. If they sniff out work, they’ll be on their bikes and forcing you to watch so that they don’t kill themselves on the road in a hot second. Wait to reveal it for the work it is when you are sick of looking at them. Scare them off on your timeline, not theirs.

A wagon is a wonderful ruse. Pull it out of the garage and give them a ride in it. If you feel strong, go ahead and run across the yard pulling them wide open. It’s likely a wheel or plastic side will fall off the wagon. You’ll be inclined to curse the cheap manufacturer, but the kids will love it. Take a corner too fast and roll them out. Aim for a bush with thorns. Jump the shrub your mother-in-law gave you that’s dead and brittle. Don’t arrive at the garden without some tears and bloodshed. Starting a gardening project like this will make things go more smoothly. They’ll be begging for rights to run this killing machine. Dole it out in small doses.

Assign jobs appropriately. Give them jobs you won’t be mad about doing over. This is a “better than nothing” venture. The odds aren’t in your favor, but sometimes they’ll succeed when you least expect it. Having the weeds put in the wagon and dumped six feet away in the middle of the yard is no worse than no help at all. Take this in stride. However, should they make the 7-foot journey and actually dump them in the right spot, it will feel like striking oil.

You’ll soon find that good jobs besides running the killing machine and digging to China, include watering the house and raking the bark off trees.

Don’t get bent out of shape over every flower popped off its stem or torn from the ground. It’s easy to go off on these things. You work all summer, every summer for eight years to finally have your garden bloom into something that’s discernible from the field growing around it. And then your 4-year-old will hand the showpiece flower to you. (see inset picture)

When this happens, stop whatever you are doing. Focus on his charming, sweet face. He has given you the choice flower. He picked your showpiece on purpose because it was the prettiest. The fury will hit you like a ton of bricks, a quiet desperation will sneak into the back of your throat and you’ll kind of whimper. Remember, he is the imbecile you think he is. He’s four. Try not to hurt him. Instead, gather him in your arms and hug him. Hard. Then hurry to replant the wilted plant.

Of course this won’t work, The flower was run over in a gravel driveway with a couple John Deer tractors and Big Wheels before you ever it . It was also wrapped around his little brother’s head when he tried to take it from him. This plant will never survive. Your memories of desperation will, though. Welcome to gardening with kids!!!

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

Gulf Shores family trip

Editor's note: Many of you are suspicious that I am "Lainey." So, confession: While some parts are fiction (if my dad is reading this, this passage is complete fiction), most of it is me, the me that misses my mom, loves to bike and to cuddle my kiddos. It's a book that I hope talks about the big picture and the little moments. Ultimately, it's a tribute to my mom, my best friend — learning to say good-bye to her but also remembering all the hello's. I would love to hear your own stories! (Dad, you can save your comments for later, much later.) Email me at kandace@kandacechapple.com.

GULF SHORES
Her father insisted they all go, all of them, even those who didn’t want to go. He was, after all, the only one who did. Their mother had died in January. In March, their father wanted to continue the Gulf Shores tradition.

The drive down took 21 hours, every inch of which Lainey’s father wanted them to caravan. This meant her family and her two sisters and their families were to take every left turn and off ramp in unison.

Each daughter raged inside the privacy of her own car at the injustice of having to go just 72 mph on the highway, eat at a McDonald’s without a Playland, or worse, with.

Despite their grievances, each one felt it was some small solace to her father, for he liked control in the best of times. Could they wrench it from his hands now? Their father saw and felt this storm gathering; yet he did not acknowledge it. He wanted them together and together they would be.

The weather, as they drove, matched Lainey’s mood. Gray skies followed them from Michigan down through Ohio and into the South. Colorless cloud banks as far as she could see.

Lainey decided she would sleep to ward off the power struggle unfolding among all the drivers. She shoved her pillow up against the car window and her forehead slid until it met the coolness of the glass.

She looked out and up, the sky everywhere and nowhere. Had her mother looked out the window last year like this, wondering if it was her last trip? Or knowing?

The grief always came like this. It would slip away and let her resume some normalcy: let the dog out to play, straighten the kids’ room, cut a sandwich into triangles for her son; then it would rush at her, invisible, and slam into her.

The smallest thing would set it off, like when the window’s coolness touched her skin and she felt alive in that singular sensation, that precise point of touch.

It was without warning and head-on, a shove to her stomach, her mother nowhere, her mother everywhere. It was unfathomable, that nothingness.
She felt it now, her forehead still against the cool glass and her eyes taking in the blur of gray. Is this what it felt like? Where her mother was? This fate seemed unbearable.

The kids kept chattering and the radio kept playing and the wheels kept turning as if her mother had never died. She felt the squeezing in her chest, the shove and push physically twisting her.

She fought to keep it inside, even when her husband reached over and took her hand.

She didn’t look up. They drove the rest of the way through Tennessee like this, her hand in his, her head against the window, her breathing measured, her eyes shut, the children laughing. 

The days passed in Alabama with them all standing around, pretending to have fun, yet anxious to get back to their rooms at night, the daughters to cry into their pillows, the husbands to try to salvage something from the trip. But all of them looked away, stricken, to watch their father go to bed alone each night.


~

And so it was that the family was mired in a world of sadness and confusion until a delightful event unfolded in the parking lot of Bruno’s Supermarket. It was the third night of the trip and the girls had fought over who would get dinner.
Everyone wanted this small window of freedom, to take their father’s grocery list and $100 bill and tack on booze and Cheetos under the radar.

“I’ll go. You can watch the kids.” This from Lainey’s older sister.

“No way,” Lainey’s other sister said, snatching the list. There was a silent standoff among the three girls, hushed, outside the door to the condo, the men inside oblivious with five children shredding the wallpaper and dismantling the door trim.

“We’ll all go then,” Lainey said, the idea novel, unheralded in this time of need. Taking shifts with their mother in recent months, they never saw each other except in passing, in updates issued in the driveway or on the phone, one moving into the space the other had just vacated.

They half ran then to the elevator, scrambled into the box of silence and zipped down to the darkened parking lot, a magic tunnel.

They had Dad’s keys and the oldest sister, as always, would drive. The ride was short but thrilling, her sister taking extra care to rev their father’s well-cared-for engine. She took the corner sharp into the supermarket and clipped the curb for the pleasure alone. The mood was high.

“Nicely done,” Lainey said as they sprung from the car.

And that’s when it happened.

After 40-some-thousand miles of meticulous upkeep on his prized sedan, Lainey whaled one of the doors into a light pole.

“Ohmygod, ohmygod, ohmygod," Lainey yelped, sick in the quarter second of silence following the thud. The girls surveyed the damage, doctors around the patient.

“There’s a fricking dent all right,” one sister said.

“You’re dead,” said the other.

Lainey freaked out, running around in little circles, screeching and grabbing her stomach in panic. Her dad would not be OK with this. It would ruin his vacation. Losing his wife two months ago was one thing, but this, this was another.

As the hysteria built, another car pulled into the lot. The woman exited her car with one eye on the three frozen women and the other on her purse. The moment she was through the doors, the secret began.

“That woman hit Dad’s car,” Lainey whispered into the dark. “Yes, it looks like someone doored it.” She rubbed the thin dent up and down, relief flooding through her. Yes, with some theatrics and outright lying, she could get out of this without a permanent record.

“You can’t lie to Dad!” This from one of her sisters.

“You,” Lainey stepped up to her face and then inched in another hair, “Will-Do-As-I-Say.”

The girls fell to pieces laughing then, the warm summery air engulfing them, pushing back the memory of the cold winter air over the cemetery at home. The new sounds of the tourist town mixed with their laughter, deep and thick, coming until their guts hurt. They fell into each other, shoving and loving and hugging and giggling and pointing again at the crime before falling into fits again.

They all agreed they would feign surprise when their father found it. They would all remember coming out to find a car parked too close, and they would all, the most crucial part of the plan, not look at each other while piecing together the clues with their father.

It saved the vacation. The sisters hinged the better part of the trip on it, the telling and retelling and stringing out and gathering up and rebuilding of it.
They returned to the condo that night a team again, their sisterly love (and deception), spanning the unbearable sadness, creating a bridge from what they had lost to what was left.

They took the feeling home and wrapped their father in it, the playfulness, the love, the relief that they were together still in some way. Thankful, at last, that he’d brought them here.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Crazy for eagles

Eagles have become quite a part of our household. Nelson loves them. It all started with the live eagle cam broadcast from Decorah, Iowa.

Nelson’s teacher pulled up the live cam several times in class last year. The children got to watch three eagles born and fledged. Amazing. Free, no charge, priceless experience. However, it’s been a costly adventure around here.

Nine. Yes. Nine stuffed eagles have come to adorn our home in the last year. (Secretly pleased after taking this inventory, I first feared it was around 17.) Do you know how hard it is even to FIND a stuffed eagle? Very. So if we ever come upon one in a store, it’s like winning the lotto. Yes, we’ve won the lotto nine times in one year.

Variety. The eagles come in many varieties, every one of them with a feature that makes its purchase mandatory. One may excel in an open-wing pose in such a way that it brings Nelson to his knees with appreciation. Another might have just the right beak, yellow and curved to perfection, and Nelson will shout with disbelief that someone, somewhere, with a needle and a thread, actually looked at an eagle before designing one.

Colors. We’ve got brown, black and gray eagles. (I can concede to the brown/black debate, but gray?) We even found one eagle with a very fuzzy white head, like a “Joe Dirt” eagle. When I found Nelson trimming its head one day in the bathroom, I screamed, Did we not buy that eagle because of the mullet? “Mom, he’s gotta be bald to be a bald eagle.” Small, pint-sized reasoning. “Carry on,” I said.

Viewing. We missed school to see an eagle release in Harbor Springs. Totally worth it. However, I’d like to note quietly that I probably wouldn’t have given myself permission to miss a day of work, drive 200 miles and hang out in a snowy field with a bunch of writers. I like to remind myself on days like this that it’s enjoyable to be The Crazy Mom now and again.

After the release, as I sat in the minivan and brought my frozen feet back to life, I had one of those out-of-body experiences where I looked down at my vehicle, wedged sideways on a packed-down snow bank, with two ecstatic boys in Hawaiian shirts (the day had a vacation feel to it, hence the warm weather wardrobe) in the backseat and an eagle now a speck in the sky and thought, What am I doing?

The viewings don’t stop there. We are constantly on the lookout for eagles. We’ve canoed to eagles, skied to eagles, hiked to eagles and camped for eagles. We’re driving the eagle industry single-handedly in Michigan right now. This summer we may take the campaign west and scout out the “Golden Eagle.” Note: You cannot find a stuffed toy“Golden Eagle,” as far as I can tell. This, I realize, is my million-dollar idea waiting to happen.

Gloves. Likewise, you cannot find a pair of raptor gloves to fit a child. Who knew? Nelson wanted a pair of leather gloves that rehabilitators use when handling raptors. So, about midnight Christmas Eve, my husband and I were stenciling eagles onto a pair of extra, extra-small, elbow-length garden gloves. (Million-dollar idea No. 2.)

Names. They are all named Eagley.

Confession.
Even though I say it’s Nelson who loves eagles, Momma, too, has caught the fever. Do not get caught standing between me and a YouTube video of rare footage of an eagle swimming in a river, ever.

Ok now your turn - what obsessions have your kids developed?

Friday, March 9, 2012

Watching the clock at work

Careers are a lot like sports. Both involve training, sweat equity and “most improved” players. And after our many miles of biking and running, we’ve come to realize that all we need to know for our careers, we’ve learned from our Garmin.

These sports watches analyze your every step, whether you like it or not. Here are a few of the tell-all stats you get from a Garmin and how it intersects with a career.

Pace: 10-minute miles? This happened once last summer during the full-on heat of a 5K Cherry Fest run. We look back on that run and think, That was one sweet stretch! Remember the cheering? Compare this readily to your company’s peak sales this year. Any good stretch of business comes with cheering, confetti and, sometimes, matching t-shirts.

Distance: It’s easy to compare your career to the endurance needed to accomplish a 29-mile mountain bike race. How many cold, muddy bike rides took place over the course of the season, all in preparation for one gloriously long torture session called the Iceman? Alas, quite a few.

Remember the number of times on the trail that you laughed, got ribbed for walking a hill, or dodged a buddy cutting through a mud puddle with you in the crosshairs? It’s funny how that works — the hard rides turn out to be the good stuff, the things you liked best, even if you didn’t podium.

Like business, it’s the day in and day out that count when the gun goes off. And you better make sure you enjoy the muddy sweaty slog, because the podium isn’t where the payout is.

Cherish instead the time you spend hunched together, in muddy jerseys or business suits, trying to find your way out of a thicket of woods or a business contract at dusk, hoping to make it home in time for dinner before the family raises the hell-cry of late again? Oh yes, these are the glory days of going the distance, in business and in sport.

Time: A Garmin measures both your moving time and elapsed time. How apropos! How many days have you spent in a grinding halt in front of your computer, hour upon hour gone on things that seem to get you nowhere? Email, Facebook, Twitter, texts.

An entire day spent doing, yet nothing has changed at 5 p.m. Elapsed time is mighty and discouraging. But then, yeowza, you look up on a random Thursday and find you’ve wrapped up a new issue, secured a new client, finished a new project… and it turns out you were moving all along.

Compare that to a bike ride where your elapsed time is 3 hours but your moving time was only 2 hours, 30 minutes. You think, What the? I took 30 minutes of breaks? This will not bode well in a race.

Then you remember all the tomfoolery you stopped and partook of along the way (i.e. Facebook on wheels). And how it pushed you on, passed the time, goaded you into action. As in business, the elapsed time actually made your moving time faster.

Heart rate: Oh, the curse of the heart rate monitor. Most of us can’t stand to see all the spots we almost stroked out on the hills. Many businesses have this same sensation watching their bottom line heave up and down each month. It’s painful to watch but a necessary evil, like QuickBooks.

But sometimes it’s OK to take the ol’ Garmin off, to let your guard down for the pure enjoyment of a day in business or sport, and see what comes of it. Sit down, let your heart rate come down and enjoy a little elapsed time with us.
Tell us ... what's your favorite way to spend elapsed time at work?

Thursday, March 1, 2012

Open for Haircuts

Form a line, folks.

My sons are 7 and 9, and I’ve finally given up cutting my sons’ hair. There’s a small indication that this has been 7 to 9 years too long in coming.
I thought they were simple men, and in fact, one of them still is. The 7-year-old is fine with whatever a No. 4 clip can hand out. But Kendall, my older son, started to make noise about wanting a hairstyle. Third grade appears to bring with it a sense of one’s self and a Nickelodeon awareness of fashion.
He wanted long hair. “The kind you can flip, like this,” he said, whipping his head while his ¼-inch hair stood still.
Fine, I said, I’ll grant you a No. 5.
This lasted through one haircut, during which he yelped with the injustice of cutting a single strand. It was such a scene that threats were made and delivered upon, me brandishing the ultimate punishment in a Conair 23-piece haircut kit.
Time passed, hair grew. In order to get him to submit to a haircut the next time, I granted him a No. 6. But I accidentally snapped on a No. 3 and watched in shock as one strip of his marvelous three months of ratty, uneven hair fell to the floor. I can’t say it was an unpleasant shock.
This time the threats were delivered from a short, tufted youngster in a long plastic bib.
As a peace offering, I decided to “officially” let him grow out his hair this winter. It’s been a rough stretch of indoor togetherness, what with me having to spend a lot of time with a hairstyle straight from Big Time Rush.
About at the peak of cabin fever, I couldn’t take it: I got out the scissors. Scissors are not, as it turns out, as foolproof as trimmers (it’s duly noted how the trimmers did, in fact, fool me). He went crazy trying to stop me, but I trimmed a little here, a little there, feeling all capable and crafty with my pocket comb and sewing scissors. It ended up looking less shaggy but, alas, more mullety.
About then, he blew up and refused any more styling from me. I noticed then that it was a mullet. Fine, I said, Go! I wanted him away from the mirror and fast.
But he loved it - had never even heard of a mullet. But everyone else took note that his new hairstyle was more or less a bad haircut. And after 9 years of bragging about cutting his hair, suspicions rested on me.
Tim said nothing, knowing full well it was a decision I had to come to on my own or he would pay far more than a $12.95 haircut could ever cost.
“We need a professional,” I finally admitted, face to face with my handiwork at a family lunch where they casually discussed the merits of cosmetology school. While I secretly prided myself on saving us untold $12.95s over the years, I was happy to be done with the chore of making small angry boys stand still.
And so I caved. I paid for each child to get a haircut. After howling through my haircuts for years, they sat in the pump chairs preening into the mirror, even as their hair fell to the floor. I watched, mystified, and worshiped these women and their thinning shears.
I was shocked to see what a real haircut looks like in this decade. The boys looked awesome! My run as Chief Haircutter has come to an end. And for this, we shall rejoice. Scissor- and mullet-free.