Friday, June 8, 2012

Chimps at the Opera

Tonight we took Austin out for his 16th birthday.  He already had a party with friends last weekend, and he will be having another get together with friends later this weekend, but Mark told him tonight was for family, and, "Whatever and wherever you want to go to eat - your choice - we'll go."  Austin is funny this way, but he's always afraid that we'll overspend on him.  For example, a few weeks ago when Mark was working late, I took the kids to an old-fashioned drive-in restaurant.  As we stood in line trying to pick ice cream flavors, he said to me, "Mom, I'll just get one scoop, because I don't want to waste dad's money.  He works hard for it."  I said, "Actually, tonight it's money from my work.  So you get what you want." He said he was now even more sure that he'd get a cheaper ice cream cone.  As he said this, the cute girl behind the counter who was serving ice cream said, "That's the sweetest, most respectful thing I've maybe ever heard a guy say."  I guess I take it for granted.  He's almost always like that, which is at the same time nice and a little annoying.  Like tonight.  He didn't want us to spend too much money on him so he asked to go to Fiesta Cancun.  I said, "Didn't dad tell you that you could pick the steak house?"  (He lives for steak.)  He said, "Yeah, but..."  I said, "But it costs too much?"  He replied, "Yeah."  Levi piped up, "Yay, Austin.  Good choice!  I love the chips at Fiesta Cancun!"  Austin and I talked back and forth about the fact that it was fine to go either place, but if he was only picking Fiesta Cancun because it was cheaper, it was the wrong reason to pick it.  (You only turn 16 once, after all.)  Levi bounced over to me and whispered loudly, "You know, you shouldn't argue with Austin on his birthday!  I like the chips at Fiesta Cancun."  Well, despite some salsa-related ulterior motives, Levi was giving good advice... don't argue with the birthday boy.  Austin said, "We're not arguing, Levi.  We're just discussing something."  (Maybe he's heard that a time or two.)  Long story short, after his dad assured him again that he could go wherever he wanted, he decided on the local steak house.


I think he regretted his choice every moment from when we walked in the door to when we walked out of it stuffed full, with three big styrofoam containers full of leftovers, and spoiling for a fight.  You see, we don't take our kids to fancy restaurants.  We don't believe in spending $10/meal for people who will eat the garnishes instead of the meal and who wear the triangle-folded napkins on their heads while shouting, "Arghhh, mayteee... avast ye... land ho."  As a result, they (especially the youngest two) don't know how to behave in a largely civilized manner when confronted with even the slightest amount of sophistication.  Austin looked like he wanted to crawl under the table, and Mark and I were amused at it all.  


For starters, before we left for the restaurant, Mark had been on an important phone call, and Levi and Violet had been running in and out of the bathroom (the only place he'd mistakenly thought he might get a few minutes of peace and quiet) squealing and laughing.  I had stopped them, just as he was getting off the phone, and said emphatically, "What were you doing?  Couldn't you see your father was on the phone?"  Well, I never call Mark "your father".  I think it was just sheer irritation that inspired the patriarchal verbiage.  Violet stopped in her tracks.  "My fahder?" she asked inquisitively.  "My fahder was on the phone with dad?  Who's my fahder?"  I said, "Your dad is your father."  "Hmmm... does that make you gramma?" she asked seriously.  She was totally weirded out that "father" and "dad" are synonymous.  Well, that started an entire evening of her trying to work the word "fahder" into every sentence she uttered.  "Can you beweeve this id my fahder?  He's not just dad he's "fahder"."  "Fahder, can you take me to the bathroom?  Fahder, watch this..." fahder, fahder, fahder.  Every time she said it, I was more overwhelmed with cuteness.  Siblings don't have the patience that mom and dad do.  While she was jibber jabbering about her amazing fahder, Levi was marveling at the fact he had two forks and two spoons while, at the same time, being annoyed that he had been given water without having been asked first what he wanted to drink.  Claire was slurping up her pop with a straw loudly, and Violet was dipping her whole hands in the water glass to get some ice to chew.  They could not calm down or sit still.  


Sadie and Claire were painfully quiet, barely wanting to speak to the waitress to order. I finally, and against my better judgment, spoke up to tell the waitress their orders, because I felt it was rude of them to mumble so quietly, and I didn't want the waitress to have to wait (even though "wait" is actually in her job title and description) for another 5 minutes to get our order going.  After all, we were on the toddler meltdown clock.  After she left the first time, I told the girls, "You don't have to be shy about ordering.  They want you to order food and spend money."  I then started into a caricature of the response a waitress might give if she didn't want to bring you food.  It went something like, "You want Sprite?  How dare you order Sprite?  We don't serve Sprite to anyone whose name starts with an S."  They started giggling, and I think my point was made.  Just once, I should order them chicken livers or frog's legs when they refuse to speak up.  That'll be the end of that.


I'm a weird mom, I think.  I know every mom must have quirks, but Austin (the only one who hasn't been with me since infancy) is apt to point out my weirdness when I say things like, "Get in the shower.  Make it snappy this time though!  Don't linger - just wash the parts with hair or cracks and get out!" I can't help it.  Our kids like to take really long showers at the expense of dish washing, laundry, and everything else that requires hot water.  Sometimes I set a timer and leave it in there, and it just annoys them till they get out.


But back to the restaurant embarrassment... All the kids' meals came with soup/salad bar.  So there were more oddities with which to cope.  Pickled herring... soup cups that are supposed to have saucers under them... the fact that this was not a buffet where you return several times to get more...  I gave Claire a soup cup and saucer, and she took the saucer out from under it and put her salad on it.  Soup spoons caused another layer of confusion.


Then the entrees came.  Panic ensued when huge leaves of lettuce and sliced oranges were spotted beneath their cheeseburgers (that could have thoroughly fed two full-grown adults).  Then Levi realized that his cheeseburger was naked - no ketchup or mustard?  What kind of low-class joint makes you apply your own ketchup and mustard to your sandwich?  Then the refills.  She brought a refill for Levi before he was done with his first Sprite.  "This isn't mine!  I already have water and Sprite too... now another Sprite?!"  As the waitress was talking (in a mild Greek accent), to my horror, he mimicked her... high pitched voice and all.  No way did he just do that.  As she walked away, I said, "Don't talk to her like that."  He said, "Well, I was just saying what she said.  She talks funny,"  I said, "Well, maybe she thinks you talk funny.  Do you want her to make fun of you?"  He responded in the negative, and Austin was shrinking further in his chair.


I asked him what was wrong, and he said, "This is so embarrassing."  (As if the elderly people sitting at the 4 tables surrounding us and the young married couple across the way were going to be texting his friends about how lame he was for having *gasp* siblings.)  I said, "I think it's kind of funny... all except that last part."  He said (as if he was so much more cultured than everyone at the table), "They're acting like barbarians."  I laughed, "It's kind of like taking chimps to an opera house, huh?"  He smiled, and we relaxed a bit.


As we finished up the rest of our meal, things settled down.  As we asked for a box, Sadie whispered to me, "I want an extra sauce to take home."  I said, "Well, we don't serve extra sauce to people whose names start with S!"  She smiled, and when the waitress came back with boxes, she asked politely, "May I have a sauce to take home?"  Sometimes, I think that making people understand that there is truly nothing to fear in most social situations might embolden them.  I suggested we sing Austin Happy Birthday before we leave, and he said, "No way, mom!"  I said, "C'mon, we can do it quietly!"  He refused.  I said, "What?  Happy Birthday is not embarrassing.  What do you think?  Everyone is going to stare and point and laugh saying, 'Look at that guy!  What a freak!  He was BORN!'"  Despite his laughter at the commentary, he still refused a birthday song.  Well, I guess you win some and you lose some.  In the fight against hormones, I rarely come out the winner.


Well, I guess when you think about it, the kids were just stating the obvious - that most of the things we do to impress one another and feel important (garnishes, cloth napkins, soup spoons) are unnecessary. After all, when faced with the vastness of the universe or the diversity of creation or the elegance of a magnolia tree in full bloom, the things we do are pretty much silly.  They are just shadowy reflections of the glory for which we were created.  1 Corinthians 13 is most renowned as the "love chapter" of the Bible... the one people like to write on plaques (love is patient, kind, doesn't boast, etc.).  The one teenagers use to measure the level of their latest crush.  We forget there is another part to that chapter - one that is encouraging to me.  For now we know in part and we prophesy in part; 10 but when the perfect comes, the partial will be done away. 11 When I was a child, I used to speak like a child, think like a child, reason like a child; when I became a man, I did away with childish things. 12 For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face; now I know in part, but then I will know fully just as I also have been fully known."


A few years ago, I read a book that detailed the life of a woman who had been a staunch feminist until she gave birth to not just one but a few handicapped children... one of whom was severely handicapped.  She related how one of her sons had to be institutionalized because he had a feeding tube and other things that made him too hard to care for at home.  She said how she'd had to humble herself completely - taking on what she would have once considered humiliating tasks - in order to provide for the care of her children.  She related a story of how, at one Christmas, they had brought their son home from the institution for the day.  She said, "As it came time for me to take him back to his 'home', I stalled by washing dishes as he sat behind me in his wheelchair.  As I washed, I felt God impress upon me that I must tell him that I loved him.  So I knelt by his chair and told him, 'Son, I love you so much!'"  She was met with a blank stare, and as she wiped away some drool from his chin, she went back to dish washing.  She said that she felt impressed to do the same thing 2 more times, and she did.  As she stood there with tears running down her cheeks wondering why God would want her to do such a thing when He clearly knew how her son would (or rather would not) respond, the reason came to her.  She said she heard, almost in an audible voice, "That's you and me."  In other words, she explained, God is always trying to tell us how much he loves us.  He is always reaching out to us - in our face at times - and telling us clearly how much he loves us.  Our response is a blank stare and a drool-covered chin.  We do not respond.  We are handicapped by our fallen state.  We are unable to give Him anything He doesn't already own or possess.  God's point to her, she felt that day, was, "Would you love your son any more if he was healthy?  Would you love him any more if he could give you a smile and a hug in return?"  Her response was, "No.  I love him for one reason - because he's mine."  He reminded her that, compared to His power and perfection, none of our talents amount to anything.  We are all severely handicapped by our sinful state - particularly when compared to the Creator of all things.


That's God and us - He loves us because we are His.  Nothing we do or don't do can make us more or less acceptable to Him.  We are acceptable as the result of a perfect sacrifice - the blood of His Son, through which He sees us as wholly and irrevocably acceptable when we have been drawn to Him as Savior and follow Him as Lord.  Thankfully, there are no shades of gray with God.  There are no levels of acceptability.  You either are or you're not, and it has nothing to do with whether or not you use the right dinner fork - or even how you vote, or even how you love.  I don't know about you, but that is an incredibly liberating feeling.  I don't have to be perfect.  In fact, compared to God, we're all just chimps at the opera.





Love is a Choice to Act


This guy turned 16 today.  It doesn't seem possible.  When I met him for the first time about 6 1/2 years ago now, he was a pudgy little cutie on my front doorstep.  Mark and I had decided that our second official "date" should be the kids meeting.  After all, if they didn't get along with each other and with each of us then we'd take that as a red light for our future.  As it so happened, Austin and I played several games of Battle Ships (both of us talking nonstop), and the girls showed Mark about every outfit in their box of dress up clothes.  I remember my girls saying that, although they loved their dad, they wanted to have a "house dad" - a guy that lived with us, protected us, and wanted to be with us every day.  Austin always said the same thing to Mark and Mark's mom - being with grandma every day was great - lots of ice cream and oatmeal cream pies - but he just wanted a "house mom".  It's funny the way kids can articulate a complex emotional concept with so few words.

Well, I think we met one another's kids in January of 2006.  We got married in April of 2006.  All of these photos were taken that sweet Spring of 2006 on the farm in Iowa before our lives took on even more changes.  There were so many changes in all of our lives that year - new homes, new schools, new family members, new friends, new jobs, new lives.  I remember feeling like God gave us that Spring in Iowa to cement our lives as family.  My girls and I relished being on the farm.  They loved the animals.


I liked the animals too, but we had some interesting conversations those months.  For instance, Mark had given me a life on the farm garbage tutorial.  In short:  food scraps go to the hogs, paper products get burned, and everything else goes in the wagon to take to the dump.  Well, after the first week, he started to notice that I was putting scraps of bacon, ham, etc. in a separate pile.  He asked what I was planning to with it all.  I replied, "Well, you can't feed that to the hogs.  That would be... wrong?"  He smiled broadly at my naivete and said, "Um, yeah you can.  If one of them drops dead in the lot, the rest of 'em go over and eat it.  So I don't think they'll mind a little bacon."  Mildly disgusted, I took mental note.  Porcine cannibals.  I still remember the day a big semi came and the fat ones got big numbers spray-painted on their backs and loaded into the trailer.  When Mark came home, I said, "Does that mean they're not coming back home?"  Ah... well, it was an education.  By the way, if you take out food scraps to the hogs after Sunday dinner, make sure you're upwind, because if not - even if you stand 30 feet back and just chuck the food in their general direction - you'll need a shower.

These are some of my favorite photos of the kids as they got used to our new lives.

























And there have been a LOT of changes for us all - especially Austin - aside from the marriage and two new sisters:

Austin's last birthday at the farm (10 years old)

saying goodbye to friends before we moved
first trip to Chicago

first ride on the subway
moving day - combining households


New little brother

First trip to Florida
First Parasail

First trip to D.C.


new baby sister

new dog... another move
BRACES!
Fast forward through basketball, soccer games, field trips, etc.


first trip to Cali!
8th grade graduation


first snuggie! :)
second tip to Cali - segways!

Grand Canyon - cross country road trip
Yesterday he got the opportunity to be part of a disaster drill near our hometown and got to get "lost" and found by a pair of search and rescue dogs who found him based only on his scent, and he'll finish off this year with a trip to Hawaii and a 9-day cruise.  Mark feigns jealousy that Austin has seen more of the world in a few years than he has ever seen himself, but I know he's so happy for the opportunities that just seem to fall into his lap (partly due to an aunt and uncle who like traveling) because of his sweetness and strength - he's a great guy to have around any time.  

All these changes... all the adventures - Austin has taken every one of them in stride.  His happy-go-lucky attitude makes it all possible.  He doesn't get too far up, and he doesn't get too far down.  He is a forever optimist and knows no strangers.  He knows two kinds of people: friends and pre-friends.  He has a gregarious personality that can likely be attributed to his mom.  

So on this 16th birthday, as I reflect on the years he's been mine, I am choosing not to be afraid to say "mine" anymore.  Never a day I've known him would I have been embarrassed to claim him, but I've often been intimidated out of owning the title "mom".  I'm not anymore.  I'm mad at me, because I've always been afraid to embrace him too closely - trying to leave room for his mom to find her way into closeness with him and not wanting to be "in the way" if it does happen.  Truth is - I've never been in the way.  I've been wasting 6 1/2 years afraid to hug him first in the morning when he wakes up... afraid to tell him I love him first... afraid that things like that might take away his chance at a closer relationship with his mom - which I've always thought he needed and would love.  Have you ever seen a nursery school child drop a toy and walk away from it, only to watch another one wander into the picture and pick the toy up?  What happens?  The first child screams, runs over, and gets mad at the someone else wanted what he had discarded.  I'm that second child.  I wanted (and still want) what another person discarded.  I love what she didn't want anymore.  Ironically, what seems like a big part of my "perfect life" - which is far from perfect - is what used to belong to someone else.  I don't know why God gave me Mark or Austin or any of the rest of my blessings.  What am I supposed to do?  Throw those things away?  Put them back in a lonely Iowa farmhouse?  I'm tired of wrestling with myself over these things.  

When I met Mark, I needed to know why he was a single dad and had been one for nearly seven years.  I asked a lot of questions, and what I was told by person after person was that Austin needed a mother figure.  Maybe I was misled by every single person who told me their version of the history of Mark and Austin, but every story matched.  That is all the truth I've known.  When I came on the scene, I was under the impression, from everyone including Austin, that he just wanted a mommy to love and who loved him back.  That's what I believed I needed to be - for Austin - not against anyone else but rather for a little boy who said he was lonely for a mom's love.  My intent has never been malicious.  I have no motive to love Austin other than to just love him.  I'm often reminded I'm not his "mom", but what is a mom?  I think that cleaning up bi-level bunk bed spaghetti vomit; washing mildewy underwear from camp (not to mention hundreds of other loads of dirty laundry); packing lunches; transporting him back and forth thousands of miles to and from sports, friends' houses, school events, and field trips over 6 years; making birthday cakes; holding his hand while the dentist pulls his tooth; taking him to the doctor when he's sick; filling out sports physical forms and making sure he gets regular checkups for eyes, teeth, and health; taking him to the bank to open his first checking account; walking him through filling out his first job application; and just being ready for a hug when he feels like he needs one is a good start.  I'm not ashamed that he calls me "mom", and I won't refer to him and introduce him as my "step-son" to make people (who neither know or care about either one of us) happy.  I may have missed his first breath and his first step, but he'll be there for my last.  I may have missed his first tooth falling out or his first time riding a two-wheel bike, but I'll be holding the camera when he drives out our driveway by himself for the first time later this month.

Bottom line:   Austin is a sweet, caring, friendly, strong, hard-working, frugal, optimistic, hugger.  I love that he has another mom, and I see her positive attitude and sweet smile whenever I look at his face, and I'm sure that a bevvy of his other positive attributes come from her.  Those things are also, ironically, blessings that I enjoy.  I hope that someday she wants to do the job I'm doing, but until then, "Hi, I'm Austin's mom.  Lord willing, I'll be planning his high school graduation party.  I'll be ironing his gown for and straightening his cap at his college graduation.  I'll be pinning a flower on his lapel on his wedding day.  I'll be the first visitor at the hospital if he's hurt or if his wife's having a baby, and I'll be the first one on call if they need a babysitter for 'date night'."  It's an awesome job, and somebody gets to do it.  Why not me?  I'm thankful, beyond belief, for the opportunity I've been afforded.  All people need some constants in their lives.  I intend to help his dad fill those shoes till I've drawn my last breath.  I hope, if something ever happens to me and I'm unable to do that for any of my children, someone will step in and be a constant for them.