Sunday, February 28, 2010

Primary Party Redo

In the Fall of Manny's first year at his school, he was invited to a pool party. It was the party that the boys from Lord of the Flies would have revelled in. The whole night I felt like that was the unspoken theme-- shirtless boys flinging themselves into the water and later double-fisting candy and whacking eachother with inflatable swords. Piggy and Ralph would have been proud.

First off, this was before I was liberated from the notion that I needed to attend everything to which we were invited. And I looked at it like a chance at a clear-headed, one-on-one date with my boy. Because he is still not proficient in the water, I packed his life jacket, extra clothes and my swimsuit,too.

Then we arrive at this highschool pool with texting-teenagers as lifeguards/party MC's. And parents are dropping kids off. Parents, coiffed hair, and clicky date shoes, are dropping off their first graders. I was caught between mystified and wrathful. This is not to disparage the gracious and generous family who hosted the party. Themselves parents of four, like us, scratch their heads mystified by parenting and what kids at that age and in that number are capable of.

Inside it is loud in a unique way that only a high school hallway and pool can be loud. I look over and Manny, very excitedly greets the birthday boy only to be ignored. The boys mother prods him, and the birthday kid gives a perfunctory wave. Manny's chin goes down and he looks at his shoes as we walk to the locker room. And the Women's locker room no less. There was no way I was going to let him go in and change in there by himself and did not at the time know or trust anyone to go in there with him. We get changed and he says he doesn't want the life-jacket. We get onto the pool deck and it is a few Mamas like me with their kiddos but mostly it is 8 year old boys.

It was all the anxiety-producing things at once: high school + swimming pool + children with iffy swimming skills + social anxiety + postpartum body issues. It was like a developmental fishbowl: Here are the alpha parents who are able to drop their kids off and sit down to Pad Thai at PF Chang's. Here are their 8 year old boys who do the butterfly stroke for fun. Then here you have the kids who don't swim but who enjoy cannon-ball jumps with reckless abandon. And here are their parents who are in Danskos and chatting on cell phones on the pool deck. Then there's me, ears up to my shoulders with tension, not taking my eye off my equally tense boy. We played a short game of catch, but mostly watched the water-chaos. We were both out of our element, two quiet talkers, in a rough sea of splash balls and crumbly kickboards.

Dried and changed, I thought things would be better once Manny got food and things were winding down. Manny had a cup full of popcorn and stood with his friends. He called out the name of the birthday kid to get his attention. He listened for a sec and when Manny stammered a little too long, the kid said, "Not now, Manny." Manny turned around to me, blinking back tears. I didn't say anything and just said, "How are you, buddy?" He wiped his eyes, "I think I got popcorn salt in my eyes." At that moment, I vowed the following: to resume homeschooling at once, to never ever throw a pool party, and never to tell my kids about party invitations from kids I don't know. We were both deflated.

Today, more than a year later, we got a redo. We accepted the invitation from a girl who invited the whole class to a party that took place at their school. It was a Rock'n Roll themed-dance party. Manny's first co-ed dance party. He was greeted with his choice of eyewear and a homemade VIP pass. I sort of made my way away from him, chatting with mamas. And I won't say that he was by any means the center of the party or that he was even the center of my attention. But I can report to you that our boy held his own. He had meaningful interactions, he lip synced to Lady Gaga. He pinned the microphone on Taylor Swift. He even danced-- it looked like the grapevine step with hip-hop arms. He met me at the craft table. I said, "How's it going, Manny?"

"Mom, it's great. And I'm not ready to go."

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Rietz-Style Bios Pour Les Mademoiselles

Candelaria:"Margot." "Margalo." "Claresie." Nativity-obsessed. Candidate for wilderness school. Linguist. Delights in long, languid baths. Hater of turtlenecks and empire waists. Her performance troupe would be called: Camisole Dancing With Mirrors and Flashlights. Ballerina more like Soul Train and less Anna Pavlova. Couch-fort architect. Never met a vanilla ice-cream cone she didn't like. Believes that her Dad hung the moon.

Calliope:"Callio." "Cloe Free." "Teeny Toey." "Pekkis Tekkis." "Clo Clo" "Chula." My almost three-year old baby. Part Mermaid. Was the muse for Thumbelina. Collector of snowglobes. Excels in the art of purse-packing and stowing things in unlikely places. Will graduate from the Davis Moreland University Playgroup in the Spring. Plans to move to New York City when things don't go her way. Will be the undoing of her parent's diligent parenting strategies. Strict cracker-tarian. Is my Girl Friday.

Pivot Point and the Press Release

So many things have transpired since my last post, it's hard to reflect. However, I can say that the past two weekends have proved to be such experiential doozies, that it is almost all I can do to say hello here in the blogosphere. I will tell you that some of the events included the passing of a beloved guru of ours, ER surgery for Clara, and of all things, a Bar Mitzvah.

All I can say is that I feel that these past weeks serve as a pivot point for the next step-- not going back, not going forward exactly, but definitely traveling in a new direction.

Stay tuned.

Having dinner a few weeks ago with friends, one of them was describing his sister's baby blog. He was annoyed at the "press release" quality that he perceived--"Here's Madison going apple-picking!" "Here we are in our breeding glory on the beach!" As if these events had an inflated public importance. Well, I hope this blog is not that.

I write because it is my creaturely habit to do so. I know I say that all the time. Some people document in photos (with stunning dig SLR's that I lust). Some people do it by discussing big questions forum-style. I blog to get it all down. I blog to process some of our family-experiences. To bring insight, to bring hindsight. To use Geoff's distinction-- I am writing to be descriptive and not prescriptive. I am just describing my point of view. I am not prescribing or preaching or assigning or even recommending (like so many fashion blogs I love). I assume that the reader is interested in keeping up with our adventures. I assume the reader to be standing at the computer giving a solemn black-power salute in solidarity with us. I assume the reader to be cheering us on, like the great cloud of witnesses. And at the very least, I assume that the reader is reading because they want to.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Le Hot Chocolate




These phone-photos are not perfect but this is me trying to capture these things in some way.

Privacy and YSL for BTB




Benicio agrees to indulge my thrift triumph. Calliope and her insistence on privacy.

recent pics





Clara and Calliope in the Cathedral 5th Floor. The cast of players for my birthday talent show.

Monday, February 08, 2010

Kid Bio, Rietz Style

Emmanuel:"Manny," "Day", "DB", "D Rock." A vigorous and synaptic 8 yr old full of beats and impersonations. Excels in the arts of origami and finger weaving. Maker of water bombs, gallon-sized snow hunks in lieu of snow balls, and re-interpretations of Bionicals. The always hungry, veggie-chopping, chef whose preference for Bobbi's hummous is diminishing his college fund. Celebrates Halloween year-round.


Benicio:"Nicky." "Benickio." "Neechee Boy." Would like his own place. Part ninja. Teaching himself to swim with fierce independence. His pension for novelty will be his undoing. Author. Has three loose teeth. When cornered, charges head on. Maker of coupon books, comic strips, and surrealist jokes. Favors the double-hit fake-out in Dodgeball and prefers Hide'n Seek with no base.

Modeled after a Christmas card from the Rietzes of Santa Monica, who have always managed to be glamorous and humble at the same time.

Friday, February 05, 2010

Stuff I'm Learning and Maybe Taking Up Swearing

"I believe in Christianity as I believe that the sun has risen, not only because I see it, but because by it I see everything else."--C.S. Lewis

"Unveil yourself, God of glory. Wake us up to know you, Savior-King. Enlighten the eyes of our hearts. Drive away the darkness that blinds, chokes, and shrinks us. Make us see." --Dr. Powlison from the book of Ephesians

I told Geoff that I think I'm going to need to take up swearing. With all this reading that I'm doing, things can get very heavy and intense. And I don't mean cerebrally. I mean spiritually, emotionally, there is some serious weight. And so, when I'm chatting with him I want things to be really light and fun and well, easy. So, he's telling me about his students and about some of the excuses they give about their work. I'm like, "Oh, that's like totally whacked." Okay, that's not necessarily swearing but here's a better example: We were having dinner at some friends' and she said, "Maria, what should we do? How would you counsel us?" In an effort to assure them that I was neither judging them nor attempting to counsel them I laughed nervously and said, "Man, I don't know. If it were me, I'd probably lose my shit."

It's kind of a stress-breaker for me. I think it's funny. I guess I think doing it is funny. When her kids spill, my friend Maggie tells them, "Take your hands off and say 'Oh well!" Instead of having a coronary, she shrugs. Her sweet little kids look into the milk pool, unscrew their little hands, toss them over their shoulder, and giggle. I think it's like that. Like throwing up your hands at human nature, our shortcomings, our limitations and saying, oh well. Or as Anne Lamott says, "We are all fucked unto the Lord." I think I have to approach my studies this way, or I would be like the cliche med student who diagnoses himself sick with everything he studies. I would look into the depth of original sin's implications on my life, look at the pain in the lives of those around me, and just simply wither.

So forgive me. Forgive if when I blog here, I "use the swears."

What They're Saying, How They're Growing

If our upload speed weren't glacial, I would post photos of:
-The gifts they made each other for Christmas (girls to boys:macaroni glued onto framed photos and spray-painted in gold. And boys to girls: stories they wrote about birds in laminated books, tiny birds, wicker nests that came in machine-sewn cases they had made during Advent.
-Their adventure to Wertz Candy on Cumberland St. where they took a half hour carefully choosing candy cigarettes, candy legos, peanut butter opera fudge and gummi worms.
-Tiles they painted at the new Whole Paycheck (credit:Briana and Marian) in Plymouth Meeting. Manny painted a pickle. Benicio did an eggplant.
-Benicio in the pin-striped, charcoal-colored, wool Yves Saint Laurent blazer I thrifted with Ames on my birthday. (Unfortunately, he will only wear it if I pay him a dollar.)
-The cup-bottoms from the girls' hot-chocolate they downed at Le Petit Mitron. And a photo of them with chocolate mustaches and their winter caps.
-Manny running up the aisle at St. V's during the "Church Search" for his First Reconcilation Retreat.
-Manny's classmates playing Sawsaw Suka Mahuli Taya and squealing with laughter.
-Manny explaining the blood pact of the Filipino Revolution to his class.
-Calliope, toes curved over the pool's edge and jumping wearing a little styrofoam cube on her back.
-Clara doing ballet spins to Kidz Bop version of Hot and Cold.
-the "Tunnel Through Time" Geoff and the kids built for my birthday, which included Maria Callas, wall-sized projection, and myriad photos I haven't seen in so long.


What They're Saying:
I'm knitting with Benicio: Me: Benici, look at my cast-on, I'm confused, do I start here or down here?
Thoughtful pause:
Benicio: I don't know. It's okay. Just explore it.

Clara during the consecration at noon Mass: So, wine plus water makes blood? How?

The Communion Hymn on Sunday where the words say that God is "waiting like a lover." Clara, listening carefully and then laughing to herself. I say, "What's funny, Clara?" She whispers to me, "I thought they were saying LOAVER."

Manny and Benicio knitting in the living room. Manny says, "Doing this first row is hard for me."
Benicio: It's hard for everyone in the beginning.

Yesterday I was putting Calliope in the bike chariot to go pick up Clara. "I have to go get Cheep Cheep and Sax!" Cheep Cheep is a crocheted bird. Sax is her baby boy doll.

Me to the boys: Do either of you know what a sentence is?
Benicio: It's when your voice ends and you put a period at the end.