When did WE become the grown ups?

Kate’s playing t-ball this spring, on the same field where I played many years ago. As I watched her game last night, I looked around the park and saw so many of the same faces I had seen on the field way back then.

But something was different, something was off.

We weren’t the kids running the bases, fielding ground balls or picking dandelions. We were the spectators, the coaches, the league organizers, the ones carrying Dora lawn chairs and passing out Capri Suns after the game. We were the parents.

We were the grown ups.

How did that happen? And who approved it? It doesn’t make any sense to me. Frankly I felt like we were all impostors, that there were some actual, real adults behind the scenes pulling strings.

I talked it over with Jenny, and she said she and Bobby had a very similar experience during Joshua’s kindergarten screening. He’s entering the same school they both attended, and they had the same feeling I did – the juxtaposition of roles, the impossibility that they weren’t still in elementary themselves, but it was their kid’s turn.

I don’t think I know enough to be a real grown up yet. Surely there are some secrets yet to be bestowed upon me, some magical moment when it will click and when I will start feeling like an adult.

But it sure hasn’t happened yet.

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The Wonder

This evening I watched my husband give the kids a bath. It was a quick bath, the kind you give not because you really have time or especially want to, not because it’s “bath night”, but because, well, your kids stink. Because spring has sprung, they’ve been playing outside, and they smell like it.

It was late, past Sophie’s bedtime really, so Bobby washed them as quickly and thoroughly as he could. And while he washed, I watched.

What I saw mesmerized me. I couldn’t tear my eyes away from their shiny wet skin, their splash-inspired smiles, their saturated hair.

Surrounded by bubbles, laughing, playing, soaking, my children were so beautiful. As beautiful as I’ve ever seen them.

In the midst of something so routine, I was stunned by it. Awed. The bathroom was strewn with dirty clothes and towels, the laundry hamper overflowing, and yet in the middle of all that mess was such perfection.

My children. How could they come from me? I wondered.

And then I realized what I’ve known but had somehow forgotten. They didn’t come from me, they came to me, two gifts entrusted to me from a God who does all things intending glory.

Looking at them tonight in a sea of suds I saw glory more clearly than ever before.

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On Being Shredded

So a couple weeks ago, when I was in a very special – magical – place, I heard these two

Andrea from MommySnacks and Maria from BSM Media
talking about how they got their crazy-hot bods.

They kept talking about something called “The Shred
.” I feign ignorance, but of course I had heard of it – Andrea had been tweeting about it for weeks! So I stuffed my face with chocolate and fruity drinks listened intently and made a mental note to google “The Shred” when I got back to Ohio.

Long story short, but happy Mother’s Day to me, I get an exercise DVD! I would have rather had a blender.

Just kidding! I picked it up off the shelf at Best Buy the night before MD, and told Andy to buy it for me. (A girl has to make sure she gets a MD gift, right? Just kidding! Ok I’m not kidding on that one).

ANYWAY… the DVD has made a lovely coaster since then, but tonight I finally broke it out. And it felt GOOD.

It’s 20 minutes… a very hardcore 20 minutes, but still – 20 minutes. I found time to do it today, despite having worked all day, attended my first grad class of the summer, missing a t-ball game, cooking defrosting dinner (thank you Once a Month Mom!), and getting the kids off to bed. It was 20 minutes, and I knew I could fit it in.

I did, and it felt fantastic. This is the workout made for me.

A bold statement, I know. And let’s hope that tonight was not a fluke, and that I can make it through the next 29 days of the 30 day Shred. I really liked the way Jillian motivates, and I’m going to keep at it.

Did you hear that, everybody?

We’ll talk in 30 days.

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