blogs I love ...

... prompted by OMSH's Valentines day contest, but no less valid for the prompting :)

I love reading NightingaleShiraz. She's a brilliant writer, and has an incredible knack for making you feel like you're right there sitting across from her when she describes a journey or a place. She just as often takes you inside her heart, and tells you how she's feeling. Great links, when she posts them, and not one puff of fluff. Every word is golden. I click over there when I want something to sink my teeth into, and make me think.

What's not to love about Secret Agent Josephine? Great delightful rambles, romps, and sighs through her life as a mom/artist/designer/beach bum. I identify with so many things (though not the beach!) and she's so delightfully candid. No fluff there either, though there's lots of great pics and illos to drool over :). I like it best when she's either over-the-top excited, or a little down. She posts no matter how she feels, and tackles the really tough family issues that I'm afraid to open my mouth about usually. She's brave, generous, funny, and a fabulous mom. Her daughter is adorable of course, just a bit older than Fynn, and an imp.

And Alex? He always makes me really think. Found him thru NightingaleShiraz, and the writing is even more dead on. His words sing achingly together, and hit home in a not-so-gentle way sometimes. He doesn't post often, but its always worth waiting for.

Day 29 - Needlessly complex

The day started off with all of us (minus Fynn) unreasonably irritated. Schedules were thrown into chaos last night as I discovered at 5:15 pm that the only possible times to take my mandatory (news to me) SLT training for D's school was at 5:30 last night or tonight. That's the team I was elected to last week, made up of teachers, parents, the Principal, and the PTA pres, which creates the Comprehensive Educational Plan for the school. That means every detail of who teaches what, how, with what funding, from where ... yadda yadda. I thought it was an advisory committee when I signed up, not a budgeting nightmare! It technically is advisory as the principal has final say.

I had to scramble for babysitting tonight, and get M to come home and pick up and feed the boys before going on his alone night. All for the privilege of listening to 2 hours of acronyms, corp-speak, academic mumbo jumbo (can you tell I was impressed?!) and descriptions of just how to create this CEP for the school. The titles alone made me want to giggle or scream, and the more I heard the less it sounded like ANYthing could be accomplished in a system so complex, convoluted, changing, and just plain bureaucratic. And I only saw a wee glimpse of the whole thing.

I struggled to stay focused (though lack of supper didn't help) and found myself wishing for a one-room school house with mixed grades to send my kids to. Reactionary I'm sure, but I don't for one minute think the kids need to be tested every 6 weeks (including the lowest grades) in their english and math skills. Nor do I think the best way to teach them is cut recess (they have none, just the few minutes after lunch) and free time and keep the slower ones after school for an extra 37.5 minutes to cram more stuff down their throats. (yes, it's EXACTLY 37.5 minutes!) I know I don't see the whole picture, nor do I particularly want to. I'm sure I'll learn a lot more as the year goes on and I put in my mandatory additional 28 hours, but I find my skin crawling at the prospect of lots of paper and pencil pushing.

Perhaps I'm just feeling cynical?

I AM glad it's almost Friday, that NoBloPoMo ends tomorrow, and that A is coming to move the rest of his stuff out!

Day 11 - Birthdays

M has a birthday tomorrow ... Happy Birthday Wikkid! Another M had a birthday yesterday, and I didn't even tell him Happy Happy ... hope it was. I miss both of you.

I heard that D's having a boy next, and saw a gorgeous pic of her happy belly, on the beach in Cuba :)

And then there's the baby I've been talking about, finally, officially, born today. SaneMoms.com is up and running, er, crawling maybe, and needing some cleanup, but alive nonetheless. I'm so glad! It's been a whirlwind month. Less than a month, actually, as I bought the domain on October 16th. The idea's been brewing for months in the back of my head, and was really a take-off on an idea that S and I had been discussing for ages. (Thanks for letting me run with it, solo for now.) I didn't really know what I wanted it to be, or how it should work, until a month ago ... and the words and thoughts didn't really come together till yesterday. Scribbling questions while kids hollered and interrupted and begged for help with cardboard castles ... I think my stapling was a bit impatient.

I'm off to celebrate by watching Raising Arizona with M ... my M that is. If the other Coen brothers movies I've seen are any indication, I'll be pleased.

Happy Birthday SaneMoms.

Day 8 - I'm vibrating

.... with caffeine, excitement, adrenaline, and nerves, that is. (and what were you thinking?!) Why, you may ask? Because I finally got the permit approval today, giving me permission to get in over my head, work like a dog, and make a fool of myself ... or have a smashing success, however it works out.

It's a race. A 3k race. In my local park. Put on by me, and any sponsors I can drag in, to help launch my new website for moms. And to benefit a mom-kid-focused local charity. I have so much to do it's not funny, first in getting the site properly up and running (I'll be begging for help here in a week or so, in terms of posting to the boards, so be forewarned!). Not to mention planning a race, finding sponsors and prizes and vendors and marshalls and a timing company and and and ... my brain can't seem to slow down. I've been alternating between frantic activity and exhaustion, which is partly why I crashed so hard last night. I'd been getting depressed that the parks dept had promised me an answer, and then didn't come through with it for 10 days, while media deadlines were drifting by, and things like that.

As my sister pointed out today, despite my complaints, I love this kind of thing. Really. Lots to do, organizing galore, furious activity, and watching things slowly come together. The part I'm not good at, but will have to figure out, is how to ask for help. I've done better than normal at getting names and calling around for help, but in terms of asking literally for involvement ... that's where I falter. This thing, if it's to come off, is bigger than me. It's not as insane as my wedding (the craziest thing I ever planned, much more complicated than any trade show I organized back in the day, and they were bad ...) but it's still much larger than I can truly do myself.

If I had a hamster wheel illustration, I'd put it at the top, but I don't. How to keep moving, at a good pace, without driving everyone around me stark raving nuts? I've never been good at that. I always want people around me to just jump into my excited mode and work alongside, and it never works that way. Their excitement doesn't match mine, of course. Their passion.

I'm certainly glad to have found a piece of mine, though I live in fear of it petering out. What if this is just a whim that will fade? I don't know exactly what's driving it, although I've had suspicions. I do love putting people together, and finding fellowship. I love stories. I know I'm not the only mother who's struggled with her own identity since having kids. I'm tired of sites and blogs that talk endlessly and cheerily about how wonderful their kids/husbands/lives are. Don't get me wrong (or take offense if you happen to have one of those!) but it's not where I'm at I guess. I'm focused on the identity-ripping part of motherhood, and the issues it raises. Just another step from the identity-mucking-about that is marriage, and I didn't feel compelled to have a place for virtual strangers to talk about that. Somehow this is my thing.

I've felt passionately about mothers getting regular time alone since having my first. It's become my soapbox and I hardly ever find a mom who doesn't need it, or who doesn't struggle with guilt for wanting it. I'm sure they're out there, but I don't seem to run into them. I see moms in the park who have that look in their eyes. Not just the tired-exhausted-train-wreck look, along with the baggy sweats and black rims around their eyes. The I'm-barely-holding-in-my-terror-at-this-whole-thing and I-think-I've-lost-myself-in-the-shuffle look. I'm not imagining it. We somehow feel the need to hold it all together even for other moms, and that's just plain crazy. Sure we commiserate about baby blues and sleepless nights, saggy boobs and nigh-dead-romance, but we don't seem to talk about what's really going on in our heads during the crazy ride of motherhood.

That's a conversation I'm always interested in.