Tuesday, November 24, 2009

Hair Inspiration

I was wandering through some hair blogs again and came across some advice for boys (finally!) at Happy Girl Hair. Although I haven’t decide that I want to go with locs yet, I love the look of twists so I decided to give it a try. She offers links to two sites for more information-Notty Boy and Cool Men’s Hair. Neither of the links worked so I tried to google Notty Boys but ended up at a scary site about two knotty boys and the women they tie up (some really beautiful looking knots but ewww! so not what I was looking for).

I explored a few You Tube videos and gave it a try. I wet and conditioned his hair, combed it out and twisted groups of hair, added shea butter to the tips. It was fun to do and I love the look. It took quite a while and was challenging considering Nigel was never still. He was a trouper because I let him play with the water in the sink the whole time. By the end we were soaked but it was worth it.

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Happy Girl Hair also has a post about Nadia Sleep Caps which seem like a good idea to keep his hair in order when he sleeps. The hair on the sides and back of his head is much shorter than the hair on top so when he sleeps it usually knots up or frizzes from moving around in the bed. What can I do to keep all his twists in order until I get a sleep cap in the mail? The sleep caps are made from swim suit material…

When the Damn Husband comes home he noticed Nigel’s new ‘do’ right away, which is unusually observant for him.

DH: Wow, His hair looks awesome. Did Gete (my Ethiopian friend) come over and do his hair?

Me: (trying not to sound indignant) No. I did his hair.

DH: Really?

Me: Yes. Really.

DH: It looks really cool.

Me: It took a long time and I really want to have it stay in. They recommend using a sleep cap which they describe as a cap made from swim suit material. I thought we could improvise until I order one. There is a bathing suit bottom on the changing table that was Mikaela’s when she was a toddler. Put that on him before you put him to bed. (I was going out with a girlfriend– highly unusual for me)

DH: Put that on him?

Me: Yes, on his head.

DH starts to laugh.

Me: Michael, you can’t laugh when you put it on him. Try to be subtle and put it on him casually after you turn out the lights.

More laughter.

Me: Michael.

DH: Okay. Where is it? What does it look like.

Mikaela: Daddy,I know where it is; I’ll show you. It is pink polka dots.

More laughter. DH squishes up his eyes and his shoulders are shaking.

Me: No one is going to see him in it.

DH: How do I put it on him?

Me: You put the waistband over his head and the leg holes just sort of stick up in the air, but that won’t matter.

The conversation ends there because he is laughing so hard he is crying.

I wasn’t surprised to find the pseudo-cap at the bottom of the bed when I got home. I had more twisting practice this morning.

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

Getting Priorities Straight

I have found that when things get busy and I am behind in everything, the best thing I can do is play. Especially if the day is beautiful, sunny, and warm. Today I was so grateful that we are homeschoolers. My kids were outside enjoying the world instead of sitting inside a building. It is what works for us. We spent the afternoon at Tyler Arboretum exploring their tree houses.

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Playing inside a giant guitar. How cool is that?

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This is my favorite. Ropes hang down that are attached to bells all over the tree. I have the perfect spot for this in my yard. Now I just have to get the Damn Husband to help me build it.

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I was inspired by this outside musical wonderland. I want to recreate this in my yard. Neighbors beware.

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For Nigel this was a fun tunnel to climb through, for Mikaela it was a horse (Of course!), and I enjoyed making it sing.

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And by the end of the day, I had my priorities in place and all those things I felt behind in, didn’t feel as important anymore. After writing this I read Karen Maezen Miller’s post about exhalation and I realized, yes, that is what I did. I remembered to exhale.

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Carrots, Coconut, Celery and Love

After a very long night trying to meet a deadline I was hoping to sleep in until Michael left for work. Mikaela woke up early and started to tell me about all the plans she had for the day.

That’s great baby, but mommy needs a little more sleep.

It felt like only seconds later that she came back announcing my breakfast in bed was ready.

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(photograph by Mikaela)

“Mommy did you know that carrots and coconut are quite good together?”

Love and breakfast can be much better than sleep.

Saturday, November 14, 2009

The Ultimate MeMe Award


You never know where inspiration will come from. The Official Seal of the Ultimate Meme Award was given to me by Earthmama. Thank you I feel honored to be one of your five chosen. It was fun to follow the blogger who sent it to you and the other bloggers they sent it to, etc. I found so many new fun blogs in many different areas of the world. When I first read about the MeMe I thought, oh a chain letter in blog form. First impressions can be deceiving. Most people write a short list of things for each category they pick but somehow mine turned into a much longer post. Once you get me started it is hard to get me to stop. I will quote my design mentor, Douglas Marmee: “What is worth doing is worth overdoing”. That' seems to be my style. Sometimes I took myself too seriously and a few times I sat at the computer crying but I also had fun coming up with the categories and hopefully the bloggers I send it to will also. Anything can be a starting point for inspiration. My categories brought up things I hadn’t thought of in years. I allowed my choices to be a bit gnarly. One might wonder if they all truly fall into the category of favorite things. Some of my responses aren’t standard happy. Happiness for me isn’t always puppies and kisses. Sometimes it is writing and capturing the bad feeling just right.

Here are the fabulous five blogs I am passing it on to. I love what you have to say and I hope you have fun with this if you feel inspired and remember, most people just write a list. I pass the award to:

http://www.thesparklingmartins.blogspot.com/

http://www.honeysmoke.com/

http://www.mommazen.blogspot.com/

http://lydiaslifeofserendipity.blogspot.com/

http://backwoodsboogie.blogspot.com/

To accept the award, post a post on your blog, and link it to the person who gave it to you (me).

Pass it on to five other people (if you want to) by posting links to their blogs and leaving a comment in their comments. The meme that goes with this award is to think of five random categories and tell us in a post five favorite things about each category. I think the challenge and the fun comes from thinking outside the box although there is nothing wrong with listing your favorite songs or foods and as E says, there is nothing more serious or important than food.

OK now for my meme

(What is worth doing is worth overdoing.)

1. contradictions

I.

I want to like myself more and I keep doing unlikeable things.

II.

I want chickens and land and a vegetable garden and a NYC apartment with a sushi restaurant across the street that I can go to in my slippers (I used to have that). I want the smell of Indian food in the courtyard and Latin music playing in the street; I want it to be so dark the only light is stars and the only sound is crickets.

III.

I want to travel and nest. I want solitude and more children.

IV.

I want an organized home and I don’t want to clean. I want to collect odd things at garage sales and I want a house clear of clutter.

V.

I want to be thin and in shape and I love to eat and hate to exercise.

2. Love

Sometimes I am amazed at all the love I feel, how the same word can feel so different and the same.

I. daddy love

I aspire everyday of my life to be like my father but I know how I fall short. Daddy, how did you manage to always be so kind and loving? I haven’t been spending time with you lately and I feel so bad about that. Several times I have started to drive to your house and on the way I start crying so hard I turn around and go back home. Daddy, I miss you so much. How can you be right in front of me and not be there? Alzheimer's is such a cruel disease. Please come back. I am like a young child bargaining with god. I want to say please god, I will be good, give more, I will give up ______ in penance for my sins if you please bring my daddy back. I am humbled by how much it hurts everyday. Love is messy. Every day of my life, even when he was unhappy with me about something I knew shining through it all was a love for me that never wavered. Thanks you dad, for teaching me what love is.

II. mama Love

I wake up in the middle of the night and am soothed just listening to the sounds of their sweet breath. I love being sandwiched between my children. They smell deliciously different. Mikaela smells like sweet grass and clover; Nigel smells like dew and coconut. My love for them is fierce and imperfect and grows more each day even when I think it is not possible. I could move mountains for my kids. I look at them with wonder. Who will they grow up to be? Where will their lives lead them? I am honored to be their first guide through their miraculous journey to the rest of their lives.

III. hubby love

He makes me so crazy and what he thinks matters so much to me, my Damn Husband. He creates a boiling pot inside me. I try to remember what date nights used to be like. I remember going to Lincoln Center to hear Carmina Burana. I started walking up the subway that led directly into Lincoln Center and there he was, standing at the top of the stairs, shockingly handsome in his Hugo Boss suit. As he smiled down at me I felt dizzy walking up the rest of the stairs. I knew that we would be walking together from this point forward and I knew that it wasn’t going to be easy. It would be oil and water, fire and ice.


I remember going to Herban Kitchen (NYC) on Valentine’s Day. After our five course meal with organic wine I felt so light and happy holding his hand. It was such a shock to leave the warm restaurant and be outside where the cold wind was whipping down Hudson Street. It felt as though we glided back to my apartment laughing the whole way. That night we made Mikaela.

Things have changes so much; our days are filled with work, kids, finance troubles, obligation after obligation. We just keep putting out fires and in the process we seem to have put out our fire by mistake. He is a lumbering beast that comes and goes. I wonder at times if I even know him anymore. Where did our soul connection go? It is like searching inside a dark caldron for something delicate and tiny that we forgot to nurture. For now we get by knowing it is still there, somewhere, and we make due with sloppy kisses and morning mini conversations over the kids’ giggles and squeals. Love sometimes hides and lies dormant.

IV. quiet love

When I look up at the sky and feel small and full of wonder and gratitude at being alive, at being a small piece of this world.

When I take a photograph and succeed at capturing a feeling.

When I read a poem and it gives me chills, when I listen to a song (the Tinderstix) and I feel a raw knowing, a connection in my solar plexus. (I love the song, Trouble Every Day but not the movie. A friend who knows me well warned me not to see the movie and I listened to her.)


When I stop at a red light and look at the person next to me and they really look at me and see me and smile and I smile back; this small moment of connection with a stranger I will never see again.

When the balance of ordinary objects causes a startling beauty that makes me appreciate the day, my life: Mikaela’s little wooden chair, a tossed sweater and an open book; the sun creating a glow through the glass kombucha jar and casting light on an acorn and a shell; Nigel’s chubby fingers holding onto Michael’s t-shirt just above rumpled covers, two sleep faces nearly meeting.

V. self love

Neglected, boisterous, roiled, formidable. It prevails. Here I am.

3. Dreams

I. exposed

I am naked. My teeth have fallen out and I am searching the ground trying to find them.

The curtain opens and I find myself on stage. I do not know the play, it isn’t even in English. I try to act casual, I try not to be noticed, I try not to be distracting as I walk off the stage.

II. inquiry

I go to bed with a question foremost in my mind and I dream the answer.

I see my father walking through the forest. He is taking his time, strolling and stopping to look around. I have never seen him so happy, so relaxed. A few times I see him laugh out loud to himself.

I hear a baby crying. I can’t tell where it is coming from. I am frantic to find him. I follow the sounds through strange dark rooms and finally I see a small bundle. I kneel and pick him up. He quiets and stares at me.

III. lucid dreaming

Guns are going off all around me. I am angry. People are hurt and lying in the street. I am very frightened but I realize I am dreaming. To make sure I put my hand through a wall. When it melts through the wall like air I know for sure. I walk out into the gunfire. My heart is pounding. I hold up my hand and watch the bullets tear through my flesh without pain. I pick up a little girl and carry her off the street. She becomes a bird and flies away. I raise my arms and fly after her.

I see a lion off in the distance. I know I should run but I am mesmerized by the power and beauty of him. He sees me and starts to run towards me. Still, I can’t run. I watch his powerful muscles contract with each leap towards me. I know there are no lions near where I live. It takes all the strength I have to stand my ground and not run. He leaps at me and I sense that he is only wanting to play. His huge paws hit my shoulders and he knocks me over. I grab his mane with both my fists. His claws leave long blood lines down my chest. I stare into his eyes and he disappears. I stand up. I am stronger and larger than I have ever been. His power is inside of me.

IV. parallel universe

I can not sleep and I get out of bed. My house is small and I live alone. It is so quiet. I open the back door and breathe in the cold early morning air. I put on boots and head towards the mountains.

She is staring at me and screaming. Her pain is boundless. I have never seen skin so black, a body so thin, an anger so deep. I am staring at my reflection.

V. Nightmare

I have become a hideous monster. The seven deadly thrive inside me. I am an outsider, too much in my head to stay connected. Friends turn on me. I tell them a secret. You are not what we thought, they say, and back away. I am awake.

4. What I do not want to live without.

I.

Books. Wherever I go I have at least two books. Always prepared in case the doctor’s office wait is long or the car breaks down and I am waiting for a tow truck. Sometimes I am sad not to wait because it is a missed opportunity to read. I will take books to purgatory. I love to find a dog-eared, underlined book and read it thinking about the person before me reading it. It is like reading with a friend.

II.

A journal so I won’t have to write notes on small scraps of paper, along the edges of junk mail envelopes and find that an important thought got washed away in the laundry. I hate post its. They give the illusion that they are trustworthy and will stick where you leave them but they will only let you down. You will find them on the floor, stuck to your sweater, lost in the wind. I liked lined journals with soft leather covers. I have kept journals for as long as I can remember. I write my thoughts, my dreams, overheard conversations; what happened and what I wish had happened with no differentiation between them. When I am tired of being where I am I trade in for a new journal so I can start fresh with a new attitude. Sometimes I just grab any old journal and write in the empty pages. I rarely date my entries. A turn of a page could span ten years. if someone were ever to pick up my journal they might be very confused. But probably they won’t be able to read a word because my handwriting is so bad.

III.

My imagination, often the out of control troublemaker, the black sheep, the one who takes a simple list of favorite things and turns it into this. My imagination, my best friend.

IV.

Choices. I have so much trouble making them sometimes but I don’t want to loose them. This or that. One or two. Big or small. Now or later. I’ll take the remorse about making the wrong choice over not having a choice at all. Sometimes when I feel unsure I become more adamant in my decision making to compensate. Absolutely not. I will not do that. Yes, I am taking that.

Should I stay or should I go?

V.

My camera. I love taking pictures. I am a novice. My camera is much smarter than I am. I love to see a moment and capture it. The mood, the light, a second in time that will never come again. I look for secrets.

5. Secrets

I.

I saw something nasty in the woodshed, a movie line that reminds me that we all have our pain to contend with. Jane Hirschfield’s poem, For What Binds Us, talks about proud flesh:

“And see how the flesh grows back
across a wound, with a great vehemence,
more strong
than the simple, untested surface before.
There’s a name for it on horses,
when it comes back darker and raised: proud flesh,

as all flesh
is proud of its wounds, wears them
as honors given out after battle,…”

I hide my proud flesh and in doing so I have hidden myself, created a hindrance to becoming, that I have never recovered from.

II.

I long to take things, but I never do. When I was young I saw a Mary Tyler Moore episode where she was hired by a department store to test their security. She was to go into the store each day and steal whatever she could and bring it back to a undisclosed location. She loved the job. The trouble was the man who hired her was a fake and she was caught in a crime ring. Of course it ended happily after she told her story and the security men shook their heads at her naiveté. (When no one was home I used to sing the Mary Tyler Moore theme song out loud and throw my hat up into the air.)


I loved the idea of being able to steal without thinking of going to jail, without really sinning. Just seeing what I could get away with. I want to take little things that can fit in my pocket so when I feel like it I can reach my hand in and roll the trinkets around in my fingertips. I don’t remember ever taking anything. Not even as a child. I was always worried about getting a black spot on my soul, something the nuns assured me would happen if I ever committed a sin against god, which stealing surely is. In my life I have committed other sins against god according to the Catholic church but because I am no longer in good standing I can not go to confession to absolve them. Funny, although I no longer believe in confession, I can still feel the black spots arrive on my soul, black tar residue sticking to my good intentions, but I have no way to make them go away. Sometimes this helps.

III.

Don’t tell anyone. I am sometimes not very confident in my abilities. I lack assertiveness and look to others for approval. What? You knew that? Who told you?

IV.

I really like doing dishes. Strange but true. I don’t admit this to the Damn Husband because as far as household chores go, he abhors doing dishes. So as a favor to him, I have taken over that chore on a permanent basis. I never expect him to do the dishes. But I like him thinking I am doing him a big favor out of the kindness of my heart. I tend to be a very lax housekeeper. (I love the Robert Hass translation of Kobayashi Issa’s haiku: Don’t worry spiders, I keep house casually) When I need to start cleaning I always start with the dishes. (and sometimes end there) It is generally very satisfying with quick results. There is a pile of dishes. Fill the sink with warm water, wash, complete. It is my daily water meditation with a lavender scent of the dish soap. I am not so in love with doing dishes that I would turn down a dishwasher if one came my way. Until then I will enjoy my wet meditation.

V.

No. Not this one. Some secrets are meant to be kept. Forever. Remember the quote from the last line of Catcher in the Rye? “Don’t ever tell anybody anything. If you do you will start missing everyone.”

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Variety is the Spice of Life (also known as The Balls that Got Away)

I have been posting everyday and then well, I didn’t. It looks bad that the lull started right after my angry post. It makes it seem like I am still in some mood too fierce to reckon with, which actually isn’t true. I just got busy. When I read a recent post by Fierce and Nerdy I could relate:

filed in Fierce and Nerdy on Nov.06, 2009

I sometimes find that the answer to feeling insanely overwhelmed with juggling everything is to let all the balls drop, so that you can reconfigure and juggle even better when you pick up the balls again.

I responded in her comment section with:

I did more than drop my balls, I flung them all around and they are now collecting dust in various corners of the room. I often try to put on my Superwoman cape and try to keep it all together but it never works. I only manage to do a bad job at a lot of things. I am trying to mend my evil ways. On today's to-do list is only to try to discover ways to have my life feel more manageable and joyful.

And since then, I just keep thinking about what this all means, the balls, the lack of time, the anger. Is it related? I was lamenting my harried life to a friend and I asked her how she manages to keep her house clean and get everything done? She shrugged and said, “well, I don’t do anything else. I take care of the kids and when they go to bed I clean. I don’t do any other jobs." Hmm.

She doesn’t do anything else. I don’t really believe her.

What would it be like if I just took care of my kids? If I didn’t also work for the Green Burial Council and Natural Undertakings, if I didn’t also aspire to do something with my writing and keep this blog. If I didn’t have a deadline that requires me to work elsewhere after the children go to bed (why are buildings so noisy- creaks and squeaks and bumps- late at night when you are by yourself?). If I didn’t have proofreading work that is waiting in my inbox. If my parents didn’t need so much attention, if I didn’t have so many things I wanted to do. My house is filled with potential projects- a half finished knitted shawl, a started woven rug, books waiting to be read in every nook. I want a garden and chickens, I want to travel and go hiking. I would like to take up yoga and learn about medicinal herbs. I want to improve my photography skills and learn Amharic. I want to help women in Ethiopia find a way to support their children, I would love to go back to school for a long list of things. I am envious of people who just know what they want to do and they just do it. Is it a sign of a troubled mind to have so many interests, to have so many yearnings?

I am suddenly reminded of the happy dry cleaner. When I worked for a theatre company in New Jersey I used to take costumes each week to the dry cleaner in town. He was always so happy. I went to him for several years and I never saw him anything but happy. Happy. Happy. Happy. I would ask him why he was so happy. He claimed to just enjoy life. Happy also claimed to watch TV each night and love his work. He collected dirty, smelly, stained clothes and returned them to their owners less so. He didn’t aspire to do anything else. (Believe me over the years I grilled him.)

I used to send my friends to him so I could get a report back to see if he was happy with everyone, not just putting on the show to meet my expectations. He was always happy. 'Isn’t his happiness amazing?', I would ask my friends. They didn’t seem to develop the same obsession about him as I did. Happy was perhaps manically happy. To make me even crazier, I met his wife and she was, well, a b_ _ _ _. He worked 12 hour days six days a week and he had that wife. Happy had no good reason to be happy.

Maybe it was the dry cleaning chemicals causing unlikely happy hormones to overdevelop in his system. They left him content to toil by day and TV by night without other interests getting in the way and mucking things up. He had discovered the Zen of dry cleaning and required nothing more. Maybe he just saw the glass as huge and always full even if it wasn’t. Someone should do some doctorate research on Happy.

I am not unhappy. I am just perpetually seeking new anything and everything with an insatiable curiosity for it all which is where the inevitable juggling comes in.The part that gets me is that he can be so satisfied with working at the dry cleaners, watching TV and being with that wife. Repeat. Repeat again. And again.

For me, variety is indeed the spice of life. So, while my kids and I decide to investigate the uses of levers and build a lever in the backyard with a two by eight and try to pick each other up, I can’t help but be distracted by gardening plans while my kids turn the lever into a seesaw. And when we go to the Chester County Historical Museum to see the quilt exhibit it is only natural that I come home and dig out that half finished quilt out of the attic and start planning the rest of it and then I come across a box of my old writing, start reading, and become inspired to finish writing a short story that I started. And then it is dinner and I haven’t planned anything yet so I look on the internet for a good recipe and run across a web site about raw food and follow links to other raw food sites and then I realize that I still have to go print out photos for another job with a deadline that is quickly approaching. Dinner is pulled together in a flash, only partially raw. I go to OC and print the photos and long to do each activcity I see the young people doing. While the photos are printing I start to wonder how the concepts of open education, flexible thinking and natural learning could be applied to attachment therapy for newly adopted children. The only support I can find on attachment disorders relies heavily on parenting techniques I try to avoid like overly praising and reward-based training. I realize it is 2 am and I need to get home. I am babysitting all day tomorrow and having a dinner party for my husband’s birthday. Wouldn’t it be nice if the kids created large canvas paintings to hang in my husband’s office?

Hey, what are those balls doing all over the floor?

Thursday, November 5, 2009

When Anger Reigns

It is often a surprise for me, this anger that suddenly comes from nowhere and boils inside me. When everything is going wrong I do well maintaining my equilibrium. Through the gas leak, through the purchase of a new stove we can’t afford, when Nigel and Mikaela are at each other about everything and the Damn Husband is stomping around late for work, when my health goes haywire again, when my parents are sick and need attention- I manage to keep my cool through it all. But when things seem calm, it is then I feel a rage in me building at little things, at the computer mouse that won’t work, at Wanda barking, at the overflowing laundry pile. Here I am trying to hold my own beach ball underwater. Everything irritates.

I grab Thich Nhat Hahh’s book Anger, Wisdom for Cooling the Flames. I randomly open the book. The first sentence I read reminds me that I need to embrace this feeling instead of fighting it. Embrace it. I remember reading at another time how he suggests holding your anger the way you would hold a crying baby.

“Breathing in, I know that anger has manifested in me. Hello, my little anger. And breathing out, I will take good care of you.”

I realize in trying to meet everyone else's needs I have forgotten to tend to my own anger. I close the book and open it again to a chapter entitled Making Your Unwanted Guests Feel at Home.

“When you remove the embargo and the blocks of pain come up you will have to suffer a bit. There is no way to avoid it. And that is why the Buddha said that you have to learn how to embrace this pain. It is for this reason that the practice of mindfulness is so important. You generate a strong source of energy so that you can recognize, embrace, and take care of those negative energies.”

The facing page gives the Buddha’s practice of the Five Remembrances:

* I am of the nature to grow old. I cannot escape old age.

* I am of the nature to have ill health. I cannot escape ill health.

* I am of the nature to die. I cannot escape dying.

* All that is dear to me and everyone I love are of the nature to change. There is no way to escape being separated from them. I cannot keep anything. I came here empty-handed, and I go empty-handed.

* My actions are my only true belongings. I cannot escape the consequences of my actions. My actions are the ground on which I stand.

I breathe in.

I breathe out.

Amazing how ten minutes can tame a tiger.

Thank you, Thich Nhat Hanh.

Wednesday, November 4, 2009

A Letter For Mikaela

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After E saw my post about the plaque , she wrote this wonderful letter to Mikaela.

Dear Mikaela:

I want to thank you for finishing the other side of the plaque I gave your Mom. It really needed to have your message on it.

You are one smart pony. Every day is specially made for each of us. Every day is meant to be a good day. Every day brings with it gifts we accept and lessons we learn. To be grateful for both the gifts and the lessons - even when the lessons are hard ones - makes it a good day, not just for us but for everyone our life touches.

One of those hard to learn lessons is the lesson of waiting. Sometimes if we have to wait while someone else gets what they want, it begins to feel not at all good. We begin to think, "Whoa, maybe it's not my day after all." That's when it helps to remember that, thanks to you, there are two sides of the plaque I gave your Mom. One side - the one that came with it - says "I can only please one person at a time and this isn't your time." The other, that you wrote, says, "This is your day. Have a good day."

Both are part of the same plaque now. They go together. But how is it possible to have a good day when it isn't our time to be pleased? It's possible because we know that the people, like your Mom and Dad, who love us really want to please us. So we can wait, even if it isn't easy, for our time to come. It will. And because we're sure that it will - very wise people have called that sureness, grace - we're free to go ahead and enjoy our good day - even with all the bumps in it.

Take good care. Love,

Elizabeth

We are so lucky to have such wonderful friends. What a good day it is!