Tuesday, April 30, 2013

From Cool to Cold?

Mostly I have been the cool mom. My kids’ friends have been known to say in my presence and behind my back, “Wow your mom is so cool!”  I have had other kids’ parents come up to me and say (and my heart hurt a bit when they said it because I imagined how I would feel), “My kids LOVE you! They say you’re the cool mom.”
First, I will acknowledge that I cook and bake stuff and the children like that. Peanut butter oatmeal bars are perhaps their favorite, followed closely by the traditional chocolate chip cookies. Fruits are also heartily consumed: mandarins, strawberries, and grapes.  I love to see the shy smiles and adore the mumbled ‘thank yous’ as they reach a hand into the tupperware.  
        Second, I’m a great listener.  If I leave that space and quiet in the car, they will talk; drop the open-ended query and they are eager to tell me things.  There doesn’t have to be direct eye contact or even any deep, personal revelations.  But in my car, “How was your day?” can turn into much, much more than just, “Fine.....”  Not always, mind you, but often enough.  Additionally, a great lubricant to this conversation is the music.  I let them choose the music with the caveat that there be no profanity or content which is too racy.  
        Third, I’m not a big lecturer.  I rarely say things like, “You know what you should do?” or “Well, that’s because you should have....”  If a child were going to hurt themselves or someone else, I’d step in; any of us would!  But when a child is opening up and sharing something, no matter how mundane, nothing seems to shut them down faster than advice.  You can hear the crickets chirping as soon as you drop some unsolicited parental nugget.  Because at a certain age, all advice is just seen as a reprimand.  What I think they hear is- because I’m pretty certain it’s what I heard in my head at that age - “You’re wrong.  You’re stupid.  You screwed up again.”  Or words to that effect.
        One day, my son said, “My friends only like me because of you!” And we laughed.  “Well they’ll think I’m cool until the day they ask me to buy them pot or alcohol and I say no.”  He made a derisive sound and stated, “My friends won’t ever ask you to do that.”  I just smiled at him.  Yeah, maybe not.  But there will come a day when I’ll make some parental choices which will not be popular or cool.  With a fifteen year old son, I know the day is coming.  And honestly, I feel a cold dread thinking of the myriad situations which
might present themselves.

Monday, March 4, 2013

Too Pushy or Not Pushy Enough


My friend’s voice was a bit breathless on the phone as she announced, “Just wanted to let you know, at the next appointment, they’re going to ask him to stack blocks!”  She assured me that her son had stacked just fine.  I thanked her for this insider info, and as I hung up the phone, I felt grateful that my son still had 3 months in which to practice his stacking before his 18th month appointment. We’d play all kinds of stacking games.  This was going to be fun!
Except he didn’t want to stack.  Why wasn’t he stacking?  We often played with blocks but he liked me to stack them and then he’d knock them down and laugh uncontrollably.  Somehow I didn’t think this game counted as stacking.  What did it mean that he wasn’t a stacker?  Did he have some sort of developmental delays? Should I force him to practice?  Was I squelching his creativity by telling him what he had to do with the blocks?  The appointment date loomed and still no stacking.
Well, you know the end of this story:  my pediatrician didn’t even ask my son to stack.  When I questioned the doctor about the stacking, he kindly said (because I’m sure he delivered this line to thousands of panicked parents), “Your son is perfect!”  I nodded dubiously, wondering if I should switch to my friend’s pediatric practice and a doctor who truly understood the importance of stacking.  As I left the office, my thought bubble exclaimed: “Well doc, if her were PERFECT, he’d be stacking.  DUH!”  My lingering thought was: What else am I missing?  What other things is my child supposed to be doing for which I am not providing the adequate enrichment?
Thankfully my bff’s B, M, and J were there to smack me around and tell me everything was just fine.  Better than fine.  And as usual they were right.  However, their pragmatism did not keep me from experiencing what I like to refer to as my “Kristi Yamaguchi moment” when A approached his 3rd birthday.  Luckily this phase didn’t last long, but I started playing some wacky tapes in my head (8 track and cassette because I’m 46) and  they went something like this:
How did her parents know?  I mean, how did they even fathom that they were supposed to put their baby on ice skates?!  And in that sometimes nauseating way that many parents of young children are self-referential, I of course wondered what miraculous talent my own son possessed that I might be missing.  Should I be teaching him to use a computer mouse because he was going to create some astounding code? Set him up with a tiny violin?  Read Shakespeare to him?
Well, he’s 15 and his sister is 11 and I still don’t have any definitive answers.  They must accomplish some horribly mundane tasks: clean their rooms, practice piano/flute/trumpet, do dishes, vacuum, complete homework, and actually talk to us.  Yes, I read Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother by Amy Chua.  But that book only solidified by certainty that happiness is very important.  Childhood unfettered by myriad “have to’s” is essential in order for children to figure out the “want to’s” in their lives.  
So I’ve lost most of my anxiety about what phenomenal attribute of theirs I’m supposed to help cultivate and am hopefully focussing on what astonishing, fascinating, good-hearted young people they are becoming.  Have I been too pushy or not pushy enough?  We won’t know until they book themselves therapy appointments and ask for the “frequent couch discount” as my husband likes to call it.  Our children are exactly who they are supposed to be right now.   As long as they are safe and happy, we parents might consider letting them know that.  

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Let's Talk Dirty: Part 2....or a Devil's Playground


Slacker.  Perish the thought!  We don't want to act like one, neither do we want our children to exhibit those behaviors.  So what do some parents do?  Monday: Karate, Tuesday: piano, Wednesday: art, Thursday: Kumon, Friday: _____.  Some of you lapsed into your favorite Asian accent as you read that, didn't you?  (I went for a Bombay-Pune hybrid with British undertones-very sophisticated).  And there are plenty of non-Asian parents out there subjecting their children to this schedule too.  You know who you are!  Even though I'm smiling right now, I feel their pain.  There is a great deal of angst in me about not scheduling more enrichment for my children (we'll call it 'enrichment' rather than the thought that flickers through my head: the 'how to get into college' list of activities).

Connected to the messy conversation, from my last post, is the down-time conversation.  There is plenty of data to suggest that down-time is essential to processing and integrating information.  And beyond that of course we understand intellectually that peaceful, non-scheduled moments are essential to being a happy person.  A person who is comfortable in their skin. An adult who is happy being in their own home, quietly listening to music, or reading a book, or painting.

Some parents are surprised that their children don't know how to just be without a screen (laptop, netbook, smart phone, computer, iTouch, iPad, tv, etc).  But are you modeling that for them?  Do your children see you living that way?  And are you actually giving your child the gift of time to explore all the wonderful, quiet adventures life has to offer?

Some of my bff''s - B, M, and J helped me learn these beautiful lessons.  I give thanks for them - well several times a day! -every time my 11 year old daughter T tells me what animals she sees in the clouds and shows me song lyrics she's written. Or when my 15 year old son A comes barreling down the stairs, babbling about needing transistors for something he's inventing and could I please drive him to Radio Shack? The unscheduled moments are when the kids talk to me, spontaneously sit down at the piano together and create a duet, hover with me in the kitchen to assist with dinner or wait to lick a beater laden with cookie dough.  And that's the good stuff.  The important stuff they'll always remember.

Anna Quindlen, in a Mother's Day article several years ago, wrote something I will never forget:  apparently she called one of her son's and said she was writing this article and what was one of his  happiest memories of her.  And he said, without hesitation, making her laugh. Apparently he and his sibs all felt this way.  After everything and all those years,  her children remembered most and loved the best, making her laugh!  It's a beautiful lesson for all of us.  Embrace your inner slacker with your loved ones today - even if for a little while.  Give yourself and the people around you that gift.



Saturday, January 26, 2013

Let's Talk Dirty......

As I mentioned earlier, I'm not a terribly neat person.  And I believe there is a direct correlation between being a bit messy and happy, creative children.  This is one of my goals as a parent: that my children be happy.  Hopefully they'll be able to feed themselves, have a roof over their heads, become productive and giving members of society....and laugh often.  (I'm interested to see if my theory bears out in practice once my kids start applying to colleges/jobs/internships...or if I'm just a huge proponent of a theory until I have to apply it to my own life! Stay tuned)

But often I struggle with being messy.  My people conduct their lives using a host of rituals centered around cleanliness.  Now, I can't speak for all 1 billion on the sub-continent, nor the diaspora, but I'll tell you my personal experience.  Some of the rules with which I grew up:  clip finger and toe nails over a garbage can and never, ever leave them around the house, bathe daily in the morning, eliminate your bowels in the morning, eat food with your right hand (the left is used only for cleaning up after using the toilet), hand money to people only with your right hand, and never wear shoes inside the home (have dedicated indoor slippers which are never worn outside), for example.

Ahhhhh, but messiness.  By dear friend B (you'll get to know all my precious girlfriends eventually) is directly responsible for helping me embrace the messy more firmly and incorporate it in my parenting theory and practice.  Encouraging my children to get their hands dirty in the garden, planting with their father, exhorting them to cover innumerable pages with water colors and pencil scribblings,  laughing as I watched them dance in the rain.  Yes, yes,  yes, sometimes it's a complete pain.  I screamed when I found permanent marker on the walls or paint on the carpet.  But B and others talked me down off the ledge.

So that's the external messiness.  But I think learning to explore and manage the internal messiness is important too.  Digging deep to explore feelings and thoughts.  Being able to express those feelings and thoughts and delving into how to cope with them.  Understanding that life is messiness - ambiguities and multiple realities - and learning how to hold those gently and with patience, I believe goes a long way in leading a fabulous, authentic, and healthy life.  I need to remind myself of these facts as I attempt to reconcile the messy Desi (Indian) in me with all the pieces of the complicated person I am.

Monday, January 21, 2013

Thanks to all who read and tried to post yesterday.  I'm still working on the issue (in-house tech support was very helpful and adorable!)  but I have a couple things you might try if you'd like to post responses:

I logged in as someone else and was able to post....so I'm hoping these ideas work for a few of you.  Otherwise, until we can fix it for all people, please do feel free to msg me or dialog on FB.

When you look at my post, near the bottom, by 
there should be a pencil icon or a phrase that says '1 comment'.  I was able to click on those
and a box popped up in which to compose.  I wrote the word 'test' .  Directly beneath that box it says, "comment as" with a drop down menu.  I'm hoping one of those options works for your world.  I chose Google and was directed to log into my Google account.  Then, I hit the Publish button below it.  Hoping that works for you.  Though I have never blogged before, I think one of the most important pieces is the sharing of information/emotions/ideas/creativity.  So I do need to hear from people!

Today I prepared a  piece about the importance of messiness.  But I decided to table that topic once I began watching the inauguration coverage.  I feel passionately about being an American, about living here, about our political process. Yeah, of course it all makes me crazy sometimes.  But we live here where we can shout about how crazy it makes us without fear of reprisal.  That's a lovely thing.

There were two quotes I heard today which I wanted to share because they moved me so deeply.  Senator Lamar Alexander of TN quoted author Alex Haley:  "Find the good; embrace it."  And one I saw on FB today attributed to Dr Martin Luther King, Jr.:  "Life's most persistent and urgent question is, What are you doing for others?"

As many people in the nation come together for a Day of Service, I'm thinking about finding good, embracing it, and turning those thoughts and feelings inside me into doing for others.  Many of us feel stretched too thin; that life is just rushing by and we barely have time to do for ourselves and our families, let alone others.  But perhaps we're just setting the bar too high.  Next time you're in the store, maybe just pick up an extra pack of tissues or pencils for your child's or grandchild's or friend's child's classroom, bring your neighbor's paper from the driveway to their door, or - one of my fav things to do - pay for the person behind you in line for coffee at the drive through ( definitely stole that from somewhere/someone! Just say, "I want to pay for the drink order of the car behind me").  In our district, teachers have to purchase their own copy paper.  Seriously.  So I noticed the Office Depot ad for 10 reams of paper being on sale and picked one up for our school.  But the kind of good we can put out in the world doesn't have to cost money - the free kind is amazing.  Maybe thinking of BEING a Dr King overwhelms us and we end up doing nothing for too long.  Maybe we can just be a deeper, more meaningful us and that will be more than enough.

Thinking of posting once or twice a week.
Thanks for reading y'all!

Sunday, January 20, 2013

Thanks for tuning in!  I'm Gita and I'm interested in sharing about parenting, relationships, career, music, sport, writing, cooking, women's issues, girlfriends and more.  My worldview is inextricably linked to my heritage as a Desi - Indian.  My identity as a woman, amma (mom) , and wife, are colored by that lens.  Sometimes being dual ( U.S. / Desi)  rocks and sometimes it complicates things more than necessary - like most things in life which are important to us.

I'm fat.  Let's just get that out of the way.  I'm sometimes messy.  I'm not messy because I'm fat, but because I think it makes me a better Amma.  Nobody's giving me props for either of those attributes.  I'm pretty cool with that most of the time.

Reading and writing are passions of mine for which I choose not to make enough time.  I'm hoping to make different choices starting now.

More tomorrow.  Thanks for reading y'all!
G