We Like to Play Hurting Games

At least we’re safe from fat bandits

Hosea (4): “Did you know part of our fence was down?”
Mama: “It is? How did that happen?”
Hosea: “I don’t know.”
Jadon (8): “Well, at least a bandit can’t get through. At least not a fat bandit.”

The name of the game is ‘Let’s Hurt Each Other’

Jadon: “At first Hosea won and Asa got mad and kicked him, and I said, ‘Nobody does that to my brother.'”
Mama: “So you guys were hurting each other?”
Jadon: “Yeah. That was the point of the game.”

I bet I’d look good in spandex

Mama: “Asa, did you know you’re wearing the twins’ pajama pants?” (The twins are 2. Asa is 5.)
Asa (5): “Yeah. I really like tight things. I want 200,000 tight things.”

Now.

leaf hole
We did not know all the ways we were torn. We did not know they would mean so much. We did not know mistakes sit like holes punched in a life, emptying us while we aren’t looking.

Now we do.

Ongoing challenge: Find (or take) a picture. Write exactly 40 words about it. Post.
(Great practice for brevity.)

 

Some Things You Just Don’t Want to Know As a Parent

Mr. Thesaurus

In the park, the boys were playing. Hosea (4) fell off something he was climbing on.
Hosea: “I hurt my butt.”
Mama: “We don’t say that word. What do we say instead?”
Hosea: “I hurt my buttocks.”
The correct answer was booty. But what could we say?

The truth about Texas

Asa: “Our state tree is a pecan tree. And our state flower is a mockingbird.”
Jadon: “No, that’s the state bird.”
Asa: “Oooohhhhh, yeah.”
Hosea: “There’s a bunch of state bugs in Texas.”

Allergic is cool

Asa: “I can’t have milk. Remember? My elbows?”
Mama: “Well, we don’t know for sure that milk is what’s making your elbows like that. So we don’t know for sure if you’re allergic.”
Asa: Well, then I’m not allergic to anything! I have to be allergic to something!”
He was really genuinely upset about this.

But is a bad word

Mama: “Hosea, do you want to pick the books for story time?”
Hosea: “No. You go get the books this time.”
Mama: “OK. I will. But first I have to finish making your sandwich.”
Hosea: “Awwmmm. You said ‘butt’!”

Things you never want to know as a parent

At the dinner table
Asa: “One time I wiped my booty with my hand, and then I tasted it, but it didn’t taste very good. So I washed my hands.”
Mama: “That’s really, really gross.”
Asa: “Yeah. It was in your bathroom.”

What Every Parent of Twins Needs to Survive

What Every Parent of Twins Needs to Survive

I don’t know if I’ve ever faced a harder challenge in my parenting years than raising twins.

Maybe it’s because our twins came near the end of the line of boys and they see all their older brothers do, and they expect that life will be exactly like that for them.

Except there are two of them.

Oh, you want to drink out of a big-boy cup because your older brother did it when he was 2? I’m sorry. There are two of you.

Oh, you want to sit free at the table instead of strapped into your chairs because all your brothers did it when they were almost 3? I’m sorry. There are two of you.

What? You want me to leave the baby gate on your door open because you haven’t yet figured out how to climb over it (it’s coming)? I’m sorry. In case you haven’t noticed, THERE ARE TWO OF YOU.

Out twins are identical, two sides of the same egg. Nature’s gift, doctors say. One is left-handed, one is right-handed. They complete each other.

That’s part of the problem. What one doesn’t think of, the other does. What one is afraid to do, the other will try.

It’s like having four toddler wrecking balls walking around the house, scheming about what they can destroy next. I imagine their conversations go a little something like this:

Twin 1: Hey. Hey, bro. Mama’s not watching. Remember how she told us not to touch this computer? She’ll never know. Where is she?
Twin 2: She’s in the bathroom. Remember what we did last time she was in the bathroom?
Twin 1: Oh, man. That was fun. But this computer. She’ll never know. I just can’t figure out how to open it.
Twin 2: Like this. But how do you turn it on?
Twin 1: Easy. I’ve seen Daddy press this button right here.
Twin 2: There it is.
(Mama comes back into the room with the baby she just changed.)
Twin 1: Close it, close it, close it!
Twin 2: Walk away. Not too fast, not too slow. Just enough to look like we weren’t doing anything.

I love my twins. Of course I do. It’s just that they were unexpected.

If I could have read a primer two years ago, this is what it might have said:

Every parent of twins needs…

1. An extra dose of patience.

You will need this for many things. You will need it for the stranger at the store who asks to see your amazing bundles of joy and, after looking at their angelic sleeping faces, declares she “always wanted twins” and you want to say, “Oh, really? Then take mine,” because one was up screaming at 3 a.m. and as soon as you got him calmed down two hours later the other one woke up screaming, and as soon as you got that one calmed down an hour later all the other boys were up asking for breakfast. Which woke up the twins, who were also hungry. Again.

You will need it for when they learn to talk and there are so.many.words and so.many.whys and so many demands for everything under the sun. You will need it for the potty training and the big-boy-bed transitions and the constant fighting from dawn until dusk.

You will need it for the times you were helping one out of his pajamas and into his day clothes and you return back downstairs to find all the jackets removed from your poetry books and spread across the living room floor like a special carpet for toddler feet, for the six thousandth time (You should probably just put those books away, Mama. Far, far away.).

I’m an angel. That’s what this face says. Keep this picture close. You’ll need it for the times you wonder if he really is the devil.

2. Good decision-making skills.

These will come into play those times they both wake up at 3 a.m. because they’re hungry. Which one do you feed first? (Answer: You’ll figure out a way to feed both.)

You’ll need these skills when one twin is in the downstairs bathroom playing with a plunger in a potty you specifically remember your older boy didn’t flush five minutes ago when he stunk it up and the other is in his bathroom upstairs finger painting the mirror with a whole tube of eco-friendly toothpaste. Which do you get first? (Answer: The toilet one. Toothpaste is much easier to clean than the mess an overzealous plunger can make.)

You’ll need them when the one who’s known for wandering does exactly that, moves from his nap time place while you take a minute or five for a shower, because it’s been four days since the last one, and you walk out to find him playing with the computer he’s been told 50 billion times to leave alone and, in his panic to close it, he deletes the 1,500 words you wrote this morning before kids got up. What do you do? (Answer: Cry.)

3. A rigorous workout regime.

When one is running down the street because someone forgot to lock the deadbolt he can’t reach and another is going out back without shoes in 26-degree rain, you’ll want to be in shape for that. I recommend interval training. That way when they stop and change directions, you’ll be ready. You’ve done this a thousand times. Ski jumps. Football runs. All-out sprints.

When they slip, unnoticed (because they’re like ninjas), into the playroom while you’re wiping down the table after a ridiculously messy lunch, and both of them come out with their scooters, you’ll want to be able to wrestle those “cooters” from screaming, flailing bodies without hurting anyone.

And when one collapses in the middle of the park because it’s time to go and he’s not ready yet and the other thinks that just might work, you’ll need strong arms to carry 32 pounds of kicking and screaming twins back to the car, one tucked under each armpit.

4. Containment measures.

This would be things like strollers until they’re 3 and booster seats until they’re 4 and a baby gate on their door until they’re…15. Okay, maybe 13.

It also means leashes at the city zoo on a packed day, even though you said you’d never use them and you can feel the disapproval of other people and you want to say, “Come talk to me when you have 2-year-old twins. These things have saved their lives 17 billion times, and that was before we even got out of the parking lot.”

Containment saves lives. And sanity.

Twins are great. And hard. And maddening. And great. And so hard.

They can disassemble an 8-year-old’s room of LEGO Star Wars ships in 3.1 seconds. They can disassemble a heart with one identical smile and a valiant try at saying “Uptown funk you up” that sounds like it should have come with a bleep.

There’s just nothing like them in the world. You’ll be so glad you get to be their mama.

Especially after they fall asleep.

On rejection in the life of a creative

on rejection

Lately I have been immersed in the work of submitting a novel to potential agents. It is a long and tedious process but a process that is necessary if one wants to become traditionally published.

And because it has always been a dream of mine, I have spent the last three weeks sending out queries and writing summaries and putting together proposals.

A couple of days after I sent my first batch of queries, I got my first rejection. I saved it, and all the ones after, because by then they started coming fairly regularly, one or two a day. Some were personal “try me again sometime” notes, others were form letters, but they all said the same thing: “I’m just not the right person to represent this project.”

I could have let that rejection get to me. I did once.

Years ago, before I was even a mother, I finished my first novel. It was a book based on my mother’s story of betrayal and heartache and divorce, and how she climbed her way back out of the dark.

Because it was my story, too, I was incredibly close to its outcome.

I sent it out to a whole long list of agents and never even got a personal letter back, just a stack of form-letter rejections tucked away in a file somewhere.

The rejection hurt. It hurt because it felt personal. So I closed up shop. For seven years.

It took me seven whole years to pick up my fiction pen again. I wish I hadn’t wasted so much time. I wish I had tried again. I wish I had shaken the dust off my sandals and kept creating anyway.

Sometimes in our art-creating, we can become so attached to what we have created, because it holds a piece of us, that rejection of it can feel like rejection of us. So we feel tied to its outcome. What people say about it. Whether it’s accepted or lauded or ignored.

Does it cease to be art just because it does not reach the masses?

No.

No, no, no. A loud, resounding NO.

Artists will always face rejection—because art is subjective.

The books I like to read may not be the same books you like to read. The music I listen to may not even make it on your top 1 billion songs list. The photography I consider beautiful and moving may not be the same photography you consider beautiful and moving.

We see with different eyes, all of us.

Just because a handful of agents don’t think they can “get behind” my project “passionately enough to give it proper representation” doesn’t mean my project isn’t good. I know it’s good. I know it could find an audience. I know it could hold its own in the literary world.

It’s just that these things—art things—are so subjective.

But there is something I know surely today that I didn’t quite know all those years ago.

I don’t write to get published or gain recognition or to be revered in the world of literature.

I write because it’s what I was made to do. Even if I never, ever get a word of my stories published, even if no one ever sees the value between my lines, I will still create.

And that means, this time around, rejection will not have the final word. It will not steal my fiction pen for another seven years.

I will create because I am a creator. I will create in spite of rejection. Because of rejection.

Because I can’t not create.

It’s what I was made to do. It’s how I breathe. It’s how I learn to live and move and be.

And because I know this, because you know this, rejection will not clamp its chains around us. It will not hold us down. It will not bind us to a weaker pen or paintbrush or song chart.

It will propel us to create more and better and even lovelier than before.

What experience have you had with rejection? How did it affect you?

Welcome to The Ink Well Creative Community.

The Ink Well Community is evolving. While this used to be a place where I posted a prompt for writers to share their creative works, I have been receiving several inquiries about my process, how I create and read and manage a household with half a dozen little ones. So I thought we could turn this into a community of people who share about the creative process in all its many facets, from where we find our inspiration to when we find time to create (especially if we work other jobs). I’ll be sharing struggles about my creative life and logistical information about my particular creative process and what I’m learning about creativity, among many other things. I hope you’ll weigh in with your own struggles and observations and lessons. Let’s start a conversation. Let’s encourage one another. Let’s live the creative life together.

And if you have your own questions about creativity or process or inspiration, feel free to visit my contact page and send me a note.

Let’s Play ‘I Spy’ in My Closet.

I spy…
A pair of black pants
An unpacked suitcase
A letter to Mama
A little dog’s face.

I just want to say, for the record, that this isn’t my fault.

You see, there was this time we had some friends coming over for dinner, and we were drowning in art that the kids were producing in record numbers, because it was summertime and school was out and we don’t watch TV. We had these empty baskets, and my husband thought putting all the papers in the baskets and hiding them in our closet would qualify as cleaning. And then those baskets sort of exploded. All over our closet. While we weren’t looking. Because boys, of course, wanted to know where all their artwork went. And where the writing binders were put. And where those 10 billion paper airplanes ended up.

So, after all their digging, after dinner with our friends, after we put boys to bed and came back into our room and saw this abominable mess, we deflated. We gave up. We surrendered to the law of entropy. We couldn’t walk into our closet, so we just stopped hanging up our clothes and, instead, hung them over all the junk on the floor. We couldn’t reach our shoe storage, so we just left our shoes where we took them off. I could no longer put drawers away when I went digging for sewing scraps, so I just piled them on my sewing table.

Every now and then, boys still come looking for last summer’s artwork, just to keep the mess fresh. So we don’t forget it’s there, I guess. As if we could.

There are probably some science projects growing in here by now.

That reminds me–anybody seen my son’s running shorts?

How do we count it all joy in the sorrow places?

How do we count it all joy in the sorrow places?

Just a few days ago, I got a precious letter from a reader, thanking me for one of my Huff Post Parents articles.

She found it because she was looking, because she’d just lost two babies, twins, and she needed some comfort.

I have written many versions of this story, about the daughter who died before I could meet her, because writing is my way of working through something hard and unthinkable and tragic.

Writing is my way of finding my feet again.

The day they wheeled me into the operating room, where they sucked a dead baby from my uterus in the same way they take live ones from the women who don’t want them, I wrote the pain onto my phone until the anesthesia knocked me out. And then I started writing again as soon as I woke, when the agony of an empty womb ran red and bled through my fog.

I wrote in all the days after. All the months after. All the years after.

And now, three years later, there is a woman searching for comfort, and she finds my words, and she feels less alone in her sorrow, even though we are thousands of miles apart.

We count it all joy.

We count it all joy that a day as sorrowful as that one could do this: Heal another heart, or at least some small piece of it.

///

The year I turned 11 a letter came in the mail for my mother.

It told her secrets she had known for years but didn’t dare believe, because even in the humiliation, even in the shame, even in the disappointment, she still loved.

The letter told a story of a man and a woman and a child and a baby on the way. It told the truth of heartache and betrayal. It told the future of a single mother.

She didn’t feel brave enough to do it, but she did. She filed for divorce and bought a house with the last of her savings and got a second job so she could raise her kids on her own.

It wasn’t all neat and pretty, because she was lonely and heartsick and sad, and sometimes it was near impossible to see a way out of the mess.

But she put one foot in front of the other and marched on, like a heroic woman warrior, because she had three kids who needed food and shelter and more than a dad who was gone.

We grieved, all of us, and then we moved on.

There came a woman, years later, who visited her Sunday school class, who broke into tears when the leader asked for prayer requests, who could barely say what she needed to say about leaving a husband and two kids to feed and not really knowing how or if she would make it on her own.

And my remarkable mother knew the answer to this woman’s wondering.

Yes, she said. Yes, you can make it. And here is how.

The miraculous part of it is that my mother, in comforting another woman who had lived the same story, found her way fully into forgiveness.

We count it all joy.

///

It’s not easy, this counting it all joy.

Because there is a baby who died, and there is a husband who is husband no more, and how can this dark night turn to sun-bright day?

Maybe it’s hard to see from the suffering side of it, that our pain will one day, months or years or decades from now, be used to comfort another ripped-in-two heart.

Maybe it doesn’t seem fair that we would have to go through death and divorce and abandonment and shame and disappointment and fear and pain and anxiety and heartbreak so that one day down the road we will walk someone else through their own.

Maybe we wouldn’t choose it for ourselves, not in a million years.

But all those maybes don’t change the truth: that our sorrow places, those chasms cut with knives that hurt, hurt, hurt, are the very places we can be filled with the deepest joy.

Of course it’s hard, and of course it’s unwanted, and of course we would never dream of asking for the opportunity to suffer, but this is life and this is unfair and this is what happens when we choose to risk and love and live.

In the sorrow places we learn how to live with our hearts wide open. Our lives wide open. Our selves wide open.

We learn how to count it all joy.

///

When my third son was born, our pediatrician, an amazing, empathic man, breezed into the room and shook my husband’s hand, pulling him into an embrace, because he was just so excited that another Toalson boy had slipped into the world.

And then, when the congratulations were done, he took out his devices to look over the baby.

The air in the room shifted when he listened to my boy’s heart. He tried to act like it wasn’t a big deal, but I could see the alarm in his eyes.

“It sounds like there’s a murmur,” he said, and he looked at my husband, not me, because he knew, he knew what those words would do to me. “It’s probably just one of the valves that hasn’t closed up yet. Sometimes that happens. It’ll probably correct itself.” He put his devices away and then said, like an afterthought, “Come see me Monday so we can make sure.”

It didn’t correct itself.

He referred us to a specialist, and it was two weeks of dreaming about a boy whose lips turned blue while I watched and there was absolutely nothing I could do about it. Two weeks of agony, waiting for that appointment, waiting for someone to tell me if something was wrong with my baby boy’s heart.

I would put my older boys down for their nap, and I would hold my newborn while I should have been sleeping, because sleep was the least important thing in the world if I had to say goodbye. I would pull him into bed with me at night, because I was so afraid it would be the last night. I would cook dinner, holding him in my arms, my tears dropping into the chicken noodle soup.

And then, finally, finally, finally, came the appointment. I took him into the room while my husband stayed with the two other boys in the decked-out waiting room full of toys, because this was a heart doctor for children with heart defects.

I sat beside the doctor and her assistant, who was there to hold down the babies who decided they didn’t want to do an echocardiogram, but my boy slept right through it.

He slept through a doctor pointing out all the perfection, running her finger along the lines of arteries that pumped and pulled blood. He slept through a mama sobbing because of the incredible, miraculous beating of a tiny little heart, pulsing on a screen, lighting up with red and blue flashes. He slept through a mama sobbing harder, if possible, when the doctor said, “Just perfectly healthy. Nothing to worry about here.”

“I’m sorry,” I kept saying. “I’m sorry. It’s just…”

I couldn’t even find the words for something so big and yet so small, but that doctor understood. Of course she did. She sees it all the time, these tiny veins and tiny organs and tiny perfection pieces keeping a baby alive. She patted me on the arm and sent me out the door with the words, Go enjoy your healthy baby boy.

And I did.

And then.

A year later, a friend’s daughter was born with what doctors suspected was a murmur.

I knew what it was like. I knew the agony of waiting and the torture of anxiety and the way worry can take a whole birthing day and wring the life right out of it.

So I shared my story. I let her know she was not alone in her fear, that someone else had walked her shoes, that she was not forgotten or unseen but known in her suffering.

We count it all joy.

///

There is a catch here, too.

Of course there is.

Because we can suffer in silence. We can crawl into our shells and pretend life is grand and we have not a care in the world, and we can show them that worry and anxiety and suffering do not touch us.

We can grieve secretly, alone, in our closed-off places.

It’s more comfortable there, because our shells are thick and dark and hidden, and “they” don’t have to know that we questioned the purpose of life when our baby died, and “they” don’t have to know that we worried we would not make it as a single mom of three kids, and “they” don’t have to know that we doubted the very existence of God in the moments we thought our boy could die.

Or we can set those secrets free.

We can let our sorrow loose to light up the world, because the beautiful piece of sorrow is that the darker it looks on this side of it, the brighter it turns on the got-through-it side.

How do we let loose our sorrow?

We share. We tell our stories. We carry on.

We’re not the first or the last to walk through this specific sorrow space, but it is only in our sharing that we see it clearly: That we are never alone. That we can bear each other’s burdens. That we can heal, together.

That we can count it all joy.

On my shelf 3.8.15

OMS 3.8

On my shelf this week:

The Horse and His Boy, by C.S. Lewis
If Life is a Bowl of Cherries, What Am I Doing In the Pits? by Erma Bombeck
The Best of Dear Abby, by Abigail Van Buren

This week I’m reading a collection of Dear Abby advice, a book by humorist Erma Bombeck (because I just love her and now much read everything she wrote) and a new Chronicles of Narnia book with the boys.

Best quotes so far:

“It used to be a good day for me when I could remember what I called (my children) for, let alone remember who they are.”
-Erma Bombeck

Read any of these? Tell us what you thought.

A Baby Helps You Sleep

Can you read my mind?

We’re playing a game around the table, where one person expresses an emotion and all the others try to guess which emotion it is. The oldest is making a facial expression no one can name.
Mama: “Worried?”
Jadon (8): “No.”
Daddy: “Constipated?”
Jadon: “No.”
Silence.
Jadon: “Can you think of anything else? It’s from a movie that hasn’t been made yet.”
A movie that hasn’t been made yet, because it’s still in his brain.

We’re not so happy

Hosea (4) (singing): “If you’re happy and you know it–”
Asa (5): “Shut up.”

Hygiene advice from a 4-year-old

Hosea: “Daddy, you need to cut your toenails.”
Daddy: “Yeah, I do.”
Hosea: “Do you know why, Daddy?”
Daddy: “Why?”
Hosea: “Because they’re too long.”

What an 8-year-old tantrum looks like

Daddy: “No, I’m sorry, it’s not time for that right now, Jadon. It’s time to get in the bath.”
Jadon (in a growl-like voice): “YOOOUUU MMMEEEAAANNN DAAAAADDY! YOOOOUUUU FARTFACE! YOOOOUUUU BUTTFACE!”
(He was given a firm talking to, don’t worry. After we had the classic turn-your-face-away laugh.)

A baby helps you sleep

Jadon, knocking on our door after it’s lights out: “I’m having trouble getting to sleep.”
Daddy: “Why don’t you try getting in your bed and trying not to fall asleep?”
Jadon: “Sometimes when I look at baby Asher I get sleepy. Can I come look at baby Asher?”
OK. I guess that works, too.

Sex talk gone wrong

Asa (5): “Mama, I’m sorry they had to cut open your stomach to get baby Asher out.”
Mama: “They didn’t, baby. Don’t worry.”
Asa: “Oh. Well how did he come out?”
Mama: “Remember? We talked about this the other night. There’s this thing women have called the vaginal passage. Babies come out that.”
Asa: “You mean your throat?”
Yes. Exactly that. Glad you were listening, son.

Bend.

bend

It’s hard to see what waits around the bend in a road, hiding behind fog and trees and dust. I wish I could have known. I wish I had taken the exit. I wish I had held your hand tighter.

Ongoing challenge: Find a picture. Write exactly 40 words about it. Post.
(Great practice for brevity.)