100 Days

My soon-to-be 6-year old celebrated 100 days of Kindergarten this week.

I’d like to bow my head in a moment of silence for the roller coaster ride we’ve been on in 100 days.

100 days of kindergarten!

The start of “real school” for your first born really is an ass-kicker. From the endless questions about if they are ready, when they are ready to navigating a new school and it’s insane system. The paperwork, my GOD the paperwork, the endless notes that come home. The fundraisers, the teacher gifts, the volunteer hours.

Yes, the first time you send your child off to school it’s a new world for him and you.

We’ve made some tough decisions around here in this first 100 days of chaos. Some good. Some bad. Some drastic.

So while I sift through the mound of construction paper projects and permission slip reminders and practice our letters one more time…I salute you 100 days of Kindergarten. You’ve made me crazy, my son stressed, and all of us insane.

more backtalk!

Stubborn Women

There are times in my day I see my daughter just as she is- a strong, independent, unique girl. There are other times I catch a glimpse of my husband, of myself.

But my glimpses pale in comparison to the person, truly unique person, that she is becoming. I know that she gets some of her strength from me…but I don’t remember having as much as she has.

Maybe it’s a childhood sense of entitlement that allows her to sit on a rock in a playground and declare it’s “closed” to all other kids.

Hala's boulder in boulder>
Maybe it’s her lack of fear, because she knows Mom and Dad are there, that pushes her to wrap a ribbon around the staircase and attempt to propel down a few feet.

And maybe, it’s the glimpse I catch of my husband in her that gives her the courage to go toe-to-toe with her Mom over a cookie at 8pm. Yes, I invoke my husband on purpose…because I’ve never felt as stubborn as she seems to be. I also haven’t been on the receiving end of my own head-strong ways, so maybe we are one in the same.

God that scares me.

Of course I want her to be strong. But the thought of her being strong against me is frightening.

My son is so very different. He’s happy to please me and do what Mom says. Even when angry he will be the dutiful son and clean up as he’s told.

But my daughter. Oh…my daughter. It’s a battle of the wills and she will change the game just to make it appear as though she’s won. Can’t have that cookie? She really didn’t want it anyway, actually she really did want those grapes…she was only tricking me.

One of the most frequent pieces of advice I get with my daughter is to “break her will.” Tempting. Very tempting on so many levels. But also the very last thing I want to do. She NEEDS to be this way in order to compete in the world. She NEEDS to be stronger, smarter, even more stubborn than I ever was.

While I do not enjoy butting heads with her, while I take no pleasure in what is to come in 5, 10, 15 years…I want her to remain just as stubborn as she can be.

She will never grow weary of battles with her mother, I expect they will only increase in time. I already am weary, but as the Mom I’ll never give in. Or give up.

Maybe I’m crazy. Maybe I need to go for the jugular and force “submission” and allow her to fear me.

But I know, in my heart, I’m not crazy. You see, there’s something more than stubborn streaks and independence. There is also a heart of gold and a compassionate nature. There is a smile that melts the opponent and a sweetness and intellegence that makes her wise beyond her years.

No…I want her to remain exactly as she is. Strong, stubborn, and wonderful. I want her to close all the rocks in all the playgrounds and demand every cookie in the world. She’s not a mean girl, she’s a strong girl.

And there is a difference.

BlogHer Backtalk: Epsisode 1 !!!

Go check out the full story at BlogHer Backtalk

and we interupt this blog for a special annoucemet

A project I have been working very hard on is launching tomorrow over at BlogHer. Please take a look at BlogHer CEO Lisa Stone’s announcement:

“Why videoblogging? Since we launched BlogHer.com three years ago, YouTube.com has ballooned into the second-largest search engine in the world. For BlogHer.com to deliver on our mission as a one-of-a-kind news service devoted to raising the profile of what women are writing and saying on our blogs, it’s essential that BlogHer.com start sharing your news in video, as well as text.

The focus of our first BlogHer Backtalk episodes will be parenting. Of the 14 million women our network reaches every month, the majority are parents. And after watching mainstream television attempt to cover moms who blog, we knew there was room for an authentic alternative. The bloggers we invited to kick off the conversation — Lindsay Ferrier, Chris Jordan, Kelly Wickham and Erin Kotecki Vest — were excited to launch BlogHer Backtalk as a news service about what’s really happening on parenting blogs, to spotlight amazing stories and issues that those of us in the community consider most important.”

I hope you join us tomorrow for our first episode.

Happy Valentine’s Day…you big jerk

crossposted at blogher.com

Valentine’s Day has always been a bit of a tense joke in our house. You see after nearly 9 years of marriage and those many years of dating before hand- Valentine’s Day has always, without question, sucked.

It’s been known since our very first V-Day in 1997, after a year of dating, as “the day we fight and eat Italian Food.”

My husband tells the story of our first Valentine’s Day as “that time I took you to that super nice Italian restaurant in Orlando and you wouldn’t stop interrupting me so I stopped talking.”

I tell the story as “that time you ruined our special night out because you told me you didn’t ever want to get married or have kids.”

Sucker.

Anyway, every single year since that first fateful holiday we’ve gotten Italian food and fought. Every. Single. Year. Even the years I was pregnant and stuck in bed, we’ve had Italian food. Even the years one of us was at work, we had Italian carry out on an office floor. Even the years we’ve forgotten it was even a holiday, we’ve ended up with some sort of pasta and red sauce and wine.

Call it tradition. Call it “Erin has ridiculous, romantic expectations.” Call it my yearly disappointment.

Actually, I take that back. It USED to be my yearly disappointment. When my husband, very unceremoniously, announced he wasn’t going to participate in that “Stupid, fake, Hallmark Holiday” and never buy me a gift I was pretty pissed off. No presents? What the hell? Not even some flowers? Jerk. And every year I would brood and pout and more than likely instigate the fight that would inevitably follow the eggplant parm.

But as time went on, I recognized something almost sweet in our little tradition. Just that fact that we HAD a tradition was a meaningful way to celebrate the hoilday. And we did it in our own way…every year we get Italian food and every year we laugh about that first horrible V-Day and every year we end up fighting all over again.

It’s almost cute. It’s almost romantic. It’s certainly a married couple’s Valentine’s Day.

What are your Valentine traditions? Do you have any? Do you have those expectations like I always do of candy and roses?

I can’t be the only one.

For some more Valentine’s fun check out

Joy to the Blog

WiseBread

Jendi’s Journal

Contributing Editor Erin Kotecki Vest also blogs at Queen of Spain Blog

Snow!

What? It’s a novelty for us. We live in Southern California. Humor me.

My angels

Dumping Daddy

I’ve admittedly been lazy about this. Annoyed but not feeling the need to scream and yell.

However Glennia and Belinda reminded me that sometimes the only way to tell someone to #suckit, is with your wallet.

Queen of Spain blog will no longer be a Go Daddy domain. My blog has up and moved. #suckit, Go Daddy.

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Thanks to Jeremy Tanner for the help.