7/23/17

The Summer of Crowds

It's the middle of summer. Last school year is a distant memory and next is creeping toward us slower than the sun sets on these long summer days.  My summer is so filled with people and though I pine for a few moments alone with my thoughts, a non-sticky doorknob, and just to spread my arms without clocking someone in the face I know how blessed I am to be surrounded with all of these crowds of people.



Whenever I feel overwhelmed by all of the needs and feelings and bodies around me I remember the most brutal conversation I overheard between Jude and a friend of mine who was single at the time.  Jude asked, "Where is your husband?" She said, "I don't have one." And he asked "Where are your children?" She replied, "I don't have any kids yet." And Jude, ever the empath, blurts out before I could clamp my hand across his mouth, "You have nothing!"
Geez, I need to teach more social skills.  
But anyway, I have something. I have a ton. I'm hugely blessed and here is my accounting of my giant crowd of blessings this summer.


1. Tie dye crowd headed to the pride parade. M10, J8, S7, BL2, Ph1 and Moonshadow the cat.




2. Dirty crowd after 8 hours in the car stopped at our favorite diner in Reno on the way to SF.  Black Bear Diner! Is there anything messier than a toddler on a road trip? But we made it, all five of us plus the cat. AND! We got "what well behaved children" at the restaurant which is what makes these trips bearable.


3. Grandpa Crowd, post swim attempt to read them a bedtime story. We have the greatest grandpa. He loves to swim with kids, read to them, take them places and go on adventures.


4. Patriotic Crowd. We turned it out for the 4th this year. Best pic I could get.



5. Giants crowd. All of my sibs and their fams went to the Giantes game in San Jose for the 4th. We are a giants family.


5. Modern Art Crowd.  This is one of my favorite pieces at the DeYoung museum. It's the charred remains of a black church that was burned to the ground by a racist arsonist. 


6. Hippie crowd at Haight Ashbury.  These are our roots, we love to visit the neighborhood where Janis, the Grateful Dead and Hendrix all hung out. Moment of pride was when in a t-shirt store my children could identify every important musician from the 60's by their picture and they could sing their songs. Parenting A+.



7. Hiking Crowd. We hiked every day last week. It's hard to keep track of all the fun we have.




8. Swimming Crowd. Look at these beings I created and have kept alive!


9. The America Twins. Peaking in cuteness and in messiness.


10. Museum Crowd. Underwhelming exhibits but fun with the kids who understand better the art that covers our van, Further. There were picture of the original hippie van that the Merry Pranksters (Ken Kesey, Neal Cassady, etc.) drove across the country on a psychedelic odyssey and all the Fillmore concert posters from the shows their grandpa Jim saw there during the 60's.




11. My Beacontown crowd had some wedding ceremonies this week. Part of our camps included using the school parking lot to create a town where each kid was in charge of a parking space. Sam was the rabbi.  I also painted like 25 kids with henna.



12. Candytown Crowd. For art camp the kids wanted to make a town out of gingerbread houses. Instead I bought a bunch of Tupperware from the dollar store and they made them into candy houses. It was a hit!



13. Grateful Dead Crowd.  One of my life goals happened this summer when the Gift and I took Mimi and Jude to see the Dead and Company.  Apparently they don't go by the Grateful Dead without Jerry, but it was still the same wonderful experience with my little hippie family (well, some of us) and we danced all night.  I loved it.  At one point Jude said "The music matches the beat of my heart."  May I never forget that moment with my boy.



14. Bigger hike Crowd. Last weekend Danny took the babies and Mimi all weekend so the boys and I went on a solid hike to Cecret Lake. It was gorgeous. Near Alta, covered with wildflowers.



15. Football Crowd.  We were blessed to have Coaches Alex, Hoyt, and Geoff come teach the kids how to play football. I learned a little bit too. They loved dumping the water on Coach Alex after they won the scrimmage.



This is how we plan our days:
16. Wizard of Oz Crowd.  The first week of camp was theater week and we put on an entire show! The kids chose their parts, their costumes, planned the show and performed it. It was one of the best weeks of camp yet!


17. Driving back from SF Crowd. Driving 5 kids and a cat back from CA was daunting so the Gift flew out to drive us back to Utah. (Trying out that pseudonym. Haven't landed squarely on one for this beautiful man in our life.)

18. The KSL Crowd.  Mimi was filmed for a feature on KSL's morning show this month. I don't think it has aired yet but I'll link it when it does air.


19. Booty shaking Crowd. The purpose of this picture was simply to document my five kids doing a booty shaking dance while waiting for the Gift to pick us up from the pool.


20. Bike Crowd.  Few things make me happier than a pile of neighborhood kids' bikes outside my house and a kid with a mitt ready to play some sandlot ball.




Yes, it's been a very crowded summer. It's not my season to read my book or get a leisurely pedicure.  But it IS my season to be surrounded by tons of people having fun and for that I am very grateful.  

6/8/17

Mimi Mini Martha

Mimi, 10

Mimi began cooking for our family when I had a toddler and a nursing baby.  My hands were full and it was just me and the five kids, but everybody still needed to eat.  Mimi stepped up to the plate.  

Right at about 5:30pm everybody hits maximum neediness so both babies (Lou was 16 months, Philo was 1 month) needed either nursing or general tending.  I would sit in the kitchen and dictate what needed to happen in order to get dinner on the table.  The boys acted as sous chefs and Mimi would make us dinner.

Wanting to expand her talent Mimi started watching Martha Stewart on TV (it's her ultimate dream to meet Martha some day).  She would take out a little notebook and write down the recipes as Martha made them.  Of course Martha makes everything look easy, but Mimi was undaunted.  


She found a recipe called "One Pot Pasta" on YouTube and that became her go-to dinner recipe.  Her school has an art contest called Reflections in which kids were asked to tell their story through art.  She had the brilliant idea to film herself making One Pot Pasta and turn it into a YouTube video she called "Elvis in the Kitchen."  She explains that her story is 1. Cooking 2. Rock 'n Roll and 3. Crafting, thus the crafted Elvis costume.

Video:








'





Reflections Winner Ribbon!



When our neighbors and teachers heard Mimi was making dinner for our family they asked to try her creations.  For teacher appreciation week Mims delivered dinners via wagon.
Mimi and her beloved teacher Ms. Giles


Special delivery via wagon


 Mimi's favorite dish to make is Boeuf Bourguignon.  It's a fancy beef stew flavored with a "bouquet garni" which is a homemade flavor packet that she packs in netting and wraps up with twine.

Our recent family trip to Paris was guided in part by Mimi's cooking pitstops.  She had to try authentic Boeuf Bourguignon, escargot, and stop by Julia Child's and all other cooks' mecca:  E. Dehillerin.  


REAL Beef Stew



Chef Mecca


Next on Mimi's cooking agenda is a Thai cooking class in Phuket, Thailand.  Her ethnic heritage is Thai and our family is going there to learn about the kids' homeland.

The hungry mouths to feed: Mimi 10, Jude 8, Silas 7, LouLou 2, Philo 1

Mimi has been making us dinner a couple of times a week for nearly a year now and is NEARLY as proficient as I am in the kitchen.  It's the best hobby for her because everybody benefits and it's a great skill that will serve her for the rest of her life.  If you ask her nicely she will make you anything you want!

For more pics follow @mimi_mini_martha or @nortorious on Instagram.






5/8/17

My Closet Shelf


It's a weird time in my life right now.  I just left my teaching job that I've been doing for 13 years and I have this one summer of free-mindedness before I start law school.  Another of my marriages tanked.  I'm nearing middle age (currently 36?).  My children are becoming more sentient as they transition into tweenhood -- they notice things and need emotional, religious, and familial structure that they can rely upon. And I cannot provide it.
You see, I feel like I have mentally, emotionally, socially, and financially put in my oar with the Mormon church.  I've written good things about it because it has provided stability and community for my family.  I have felt the feelings.  I have done the things: married in the temple not once but twice, baptized my kids, hauled them to church by myself throughout their infancy and spent my life in the church hallways, read the scriptures, paid my tithing, accepted my place as a woman in the church, written a book that revealed my testimony, attended the temple regularly, at least attempted to do my callings (despite the fact that they are always made up or minor and never really crucial because c'mon we can't put a woman with pink hair in any real responsibility), given talks and banded with my ragtag band of misfits together around the church.  I feel like I've done my due diligence with an open hopeful heart.
When something doesn't quite sit right with Mormons they often "put it on the shelf in the closet" to deal with some other time.  We're taught to turn a blind or patient eye and just keep on keeping on and put whatever testimony problems we run into on our closet shelf.  We most certainly don't talk about the squirrelly issues like say the Joseph Smith wives thing, or the kinder hook plates thing, or the lgbt thing, or that massacre part, or, really, Christ is the God of this world but God is the God of other worlds so that's like at least two Gods and are we polytheistic?  Little things. Many more than included in this post. Shoved up on my closet shelf.
And we do not talk about these things, hence the shelf.  You feel like a jerk when you learn something that contrasts to what you learned in primary and try to ask about it.  So, the shelf!  Also voicing worries or doubts shoots your family's worry in the stratosphere.  I usually don't make waves publicly because it creates a headache for my parents.  If you're one of their friends don't ask them about it.  Anything other than gun-ho religion is super embarrassing to many families.  Furthermore, I don't like rocking their boat (in that way.  Other ways, haha!) I want my family to not have to worry that the grandchildren aren't getting exactly the religious experience that I received.  And I respect them and their choices.  Would that I could just say "I'm in, I don't care if you tell me I have to only make left turns like Derek Zoolander for the rest of my life" or whatever comes next down the line of authority.  I admire and counted myself amongst the people whose attitude was "I made my decision long ago, this is the right path.  Not reexamining it." That's a legit position. I wish I could close my eyes, shove stuff on my closet, and hope for better times.  But Socrates said the unexamined life is not worth living and I have all the weight of my children on my shoulders, and mine alone.

One thing that is on my shelf is the guilt and self loathing I experienced as a teenager in the Mormon church.  I can't make heads or tails of it.  I was a fairly normal teenager who occasionally made decisions not inline with the teachings of the church.  Nobody made me feel less than, but I certainly judged myself and I wrestled with what I felt my life should be like and what my religion tells me my life should be.  Other times I would pray for guilt because I knew I was supposed to feel bad for doing teenager things but I really didn't.  My self worth and self image was foundational designed by the fact that it is nearly impossible to feel like you ever live up to all the standards.  Aren't we supposed to be praying like seven times a day?  Your life problems would be better if you read the scriptures more.  I've been trying like a hamster on a wheel for all 18 of my adult years and I feel very similarly to the way I felt as a teen: jamming that square (rainbow) peg into the round (beige) hole.
Another thing on my closet shelf are my marriages.  One of the reasons I get married (and I would wager many of you too) is for guilt-free sex.  How lame and misguided is that?  I get married because that's what normal acceptable members who want to have temple recommends do.  Because it's better to just seal the deal, for reals seal in the temple, than it is to follow any other path. I believed the other options were bad.  Marriage is what is socially acceptable and religiously expected.  I don't know how to be single in the Mormon church.  I obviously don't know how to be married in it.

My shelf is becoming filled with decisions and actions by the current church that I consider very problematic.  The cultural standards of the Mormon church are problematic, and so are the politics.  Maybe it's just because I live in Utah, but I have been routinely crushed by the public statements about homosexuality and transgender issues.  I do not understand why the Mormon church is currently part of a "friend of the court" brief that unified with five other faith groups to oppose a federal ruling that allows transgender students to use the bathrooms matching their stated gender identity. Why?  That's not very friendly.  Why zero in on the gays with the no blessing your babies policy?  That's not friendly at all.
I wish I could shove all the worthy priesthood holders (or many of the ones I've dated) who have cheated on me, screamed in my face,  grabbed me and scared me, called me names, abandoned me with our children when the electric bill was unpaid and the lights went out, vanished when I was pregnant, vanished again three days after our baby was born, threw things in the hospital while I held my day old baby, etc., etc., right up there.  I want those type of men on my shelf too.  Not all LDS men are that way, but a fair share have internalized the patriarchy and have weird sex issues.  I don't want to look at those things, but I am little by little looking at my part in the failures.  I don't want to live with the deep scars of abuse at the hands of men that I trusted and who had clearance as decent humans from the Mormon church in the form of temple recommends.  One of the nights I was married in the temple was preceded by a day of emotional abuse.  I still went through with it.  I was in too deep.  I was a believer and a truster and a fool.
So here I find myself and my children.  I am their source of education and religion.  Can I consign them to a teenage life full of either guilt or suppression?





Can I sit by while they are told half truths like last week that Joseph Smith used the Golden Plates to translate and write the book of Mormon?  Can I allow them to be taught that gay parents are horribly morally wrong?  Do I want them to sit in a room with people who do believe that? Do I want to be in a room 61% of which voted for Trump?  Goodbye moral majority.  I will never understand how Christians voted for that dude and for shame for not copping to it.  Have they not heard him speak?  Geez, man!
And what about me?  Is there really a place for me, a bleeding heart liberal rainbow who is also body positive feminist?  I mean, I've been legit trying to live the Mormon specific gospel for so many years and frankly the bad experiences have outweighed the good.  My first temple marriage?  Stolen from me.  My second?  Riddled with problems. I pay tithing but I still struggle to pay for all these children whom I bore with the expectation of a temple worthy family.  Can I remarry in this church? Would I ever want to?  What about my politics?  Can I sit through a Sacrament Meeting or Sunday school class a day after some heinous thing has happened in our country and have nobody mention it?  Can I do some of the cultural standards apparently given by revelation from God and not others because they conflict with my conscience? Can I hand down all the trouble this religion has been for me simply because it is my cultural heritage and because parts of it have given me a very real feeling of God?  Why is this religion so difficult for me? I do not try to rebel, I try to live with integrity and I grasp for happiness.  I don't want out but I'm failing at staying in.  I want the Mormon gospel and lifestyle to make my life better.  Have I not done my part?  Isn't this the part where Christ takes you the rest of the way?
There's a common saying in the church that "the gospel is perfect, the people are not."  From where I'm sitting I don't really know if what we are being handed down is gospel.  Is it gospel that my shoulders can't be exposed?  Why? I'm not going to allow my kid to be subject to body shaming brought on by morality standards.  Is it gospel that transgendered people should get the shaft? Is it gospel that it's probably a bad idea for gay people to raise LDS kids? And, as you all well know, these are just the recent things. The church's history is a minefield.  It's gospel mixed with culture in a way that chafes. You find out little things here and there.  Joseph Smith drank alcohol (the real kind) on the way home from visiting members.  All those old dudes chewed tobacco.  But then God was like "Nope, here's some Gospel" and we had the Word of Wisdom, which is interpreted in a variety of ways.  This, the "thinking man's religion," would prefer if you didn't research too much because you will go apostate.  If this gospel ISN'T perfect then the people most certainly are.  They are perfect in their efforts and the desires of their hearts to give all that they can to this organization.
There are so many things on my closet shelf that it is collapsing.
Maybe there's a reason I've never really fit in with church.  Maybe the apparently rebellious spirit that I was given isn't rebellious at all, it's just a rainbow trying to be a puddle.
Maybe I don't fit in.  Maybe I can't do all the things and follow all the rules.
We are approaching religion differently.  Most of the cultural judgments with LDS people are self imposed: if I don't go to church every Sunday what will people think of my family?  That we're not dedicated enough?  We aren't among the tried and true never wavering? We won't get much responsibility?  Will my children be less incorporated in the community if we aren't at church?  Will I be lumped amongst the disbelievers, weak testimony, or just the lower class of Mormons?
No.  It doesn't matter.  Nobody notices, nobody cares -- it's all in my head, years of self imposed cultural behaviors.  Maybe I just can't handle sitting by myself with my five wiggly children on the pew.  Why do we do that to ourselves?
But I have a strong affinity for Christ.  And I believe in religion as a way of interpreting the world around us.  I believe in family and hope.  Can I please just have the Christ part?  The loving God who allows life to unravel and helps us out along the way, not the capricious narcissist God who throws trials at us to make us prove . . . something, and be humbled enough to rely on Him.
The Mormonism I was raised in did not allow for "cafeteria Mormonism" or picking and choosing which parts you want to cooperate with, dependent on whatever your vices are.  But that is better than nothing.  Maybe we just do the parts we believe?
Since November my kids and I have been going to Presbyterian (somewhat random Christian choice, don't actually know who Presbyr is or really what the tenants of the sect are) Church for Sacrament and then we roll over to LDS Primary because my kids love it and because I will not deny them at least the opportunity to learn some basic tools to access God and the feeling of being a normal part of their community.  Presbyterian Church has a nursery during Sacrament meeting!!  I drop off both babies at the nursery and my big kids sit with me on the pew and we actually listen.  And man, the things I have heard.  The sermons are aimed at deciphering what is the most Christian path through whatever happened in the world that week.  This week touched on the new Healthcare bill.  During Christmas they focused on the refugee status of Mary and Joseph.  Is not the purpose of religion to give you a way to think about the world?  Our country is in upheaval. My family is in upheaval.  I need some help knowing what to make of it all.
Religiously I am back to the drawing board and I'm starting with integrity.  I'm not going to give money to support Friends of the Court briefs about transgenders because I don't like discrimination.  I was reluctant to have my own baby blessed if the word of the Church doesn't allow all babies to be born equally and blessed.  I'm going to turn to religion not for my culturally adopted reasons like feeling like a failure if I miss church and making my family worry but to figure out what is true and good.  I want to have religious integrity.
A few weeks ago I heard a story that has stuck with me.  Itzhak Perlman, famed Isreali-American violinist, once walked on stage at Lincoln Center in New York to play a violin concerto.  His body is crippled from boyhood polio so he walks carefully with crutches to his seat.  As the conductor began there was an audible pop.  A string on Perlman's violin had broken.  Most artists would delay the concert to fix the violin but Perlman nodded to the conductor, closed his eyes and played.  He transposed an entire concerto on the fly with just three strings.
When he finished the audience exploded in applause.  Perlman pulled himself up and spoke.  He said, "Sometimes it is the artist's task to find out how much music you can still make with what remains."

What remains here for me in my Mormon faith?  Christ.  Family.  Community. Integrity. I'm going to make whatever music I can with those.