(See the end of the review for your chance to win a copy of Coal Train Railroad!)
I didn't really mean to do it. It was just that I'd been listening to this interview with Wynton Marsalis and I was pretty much smitten with him. During the interview, he offered some suggestions for jazz to play for kids to get them all, well, all jazzed about jazz. A little bit of Louis. A tad of Thelonius. A dab of Duke. A dollop of Dizzy. It sounded so easy, so hip, so sophisticated. I could do it. I could easily introduce my children to jazz.
So I picked up a couple of albums and slapped 'em onto my girls' iTunes playlist. The next time we were sailing down the highway, I shuffled the list and couldn't wait to hear their reactions to what was sure to be their new love. Jazz.
I was especially excited about how Baby, then five years old, would receive the music. She's the most discriminating and has very sophisticated taste in music. She loves to play with her voice and can keep up with the likes of Karin Bergquist, Abigail Washburn and Leigh Nash. So when Satchmo's Zip-A-Dee-Doo-Dah burst onto the speakers, I thought she would just love it.
"Skip it!" she called from her perch on the back bench seat.
"'Skip it?'" I cried. "What do you mean 'skip it?' This is the great Satchmo! This is fine American music! My darling daughter, this is JAZZ!"
"Skip it," she repeated, unaffected.
But I persisted. I told her we had to listen to it, we had to get to know it a bit. We couldn't be quick to judge, now, could we?
And so she begrudgingly endured Louis, Thelonious, Duke and Dizzy, calling out an irate and impatient "SKIP IT!" if the jamming went on even a bar too long.
One afternoon, while we were motoring along, "I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)" hammered the final nail in the coffin. As soon as the first notes swelled from the speakers and filled the minivan, Baby hollered out disdainfully, "What is this? JAZZ?!?"
So I gave up. No more jazz.
When my friend Katy Bowser announced that she had just finished a kids' album, a kids' JAZZ album, I read the press release, shaking my head sadly. I love Katie's stuff, but my kids would simply not stomach the jazz. It looked like Coal Train Railroad would not grace our iTunes playlist.
But Katy persisted. Her tweets and her status updates and the glowing reviews changed my mind. I decided I had to listen to it, I had to get to know it a bit. I couldn't be quick to judge, now, could I?
I listened to the album all alone first, making sure that I wouldn't be more deeply embedding my children's disdain. And I fell in love. Katy's fun and easy style, her sweet and playful lines, the endearing way she addresses such important subjects as mouth noises, belly buttons and fruit juice had me really hoping Baby would like what she heard.
So I loaded up the iPod and one day, as I was taking the kiddoes, both young and older, out to lunch, I played Coal Train Railroad. And I held my breath.
And...
She liked it!
Not only did Baby like it, but 19-year-old Bard liked it, and ten-year-old Sweetheart liked it and 14-year-old Monet liked it. They giggled over "My Mouth and Me," nodded empathetically to "It's Hard to Listen" and car-danced to "Just the Juice, Jack." Katy had done it. She'd redeemed the reputation of jazz in our family.
And it's no surprise! In addition to Katy's sweet voice, the record is kissed by the talent of producer Chris Donohue, who has recorded and performed internationally with a broad variety of artists including Emmylou Harris, Ben Folds, Lyle Lovett, Gillian Welch, Sam Bush, Phil Keaggy, Over the Rhine, Vigilantes of Love and Sixpence. Baby didn't have a choice! She had to love it, and love it she did.
Now the songs are in our regular rotation, and the lyrics have entered our family's lexicon.
And Baby has added Katy Bowser's to the lineup of voices she loves to emulate. Just last night, while playing on the My Little Pony website, Baby vocalized in a bluesy little vibrato:
"Snuggling suits me just fine!
A cozy blanket and a friend of mine.
Can I borrow your toes?
Mine are nearly froze!
Snuggling suits me just fine!"
Thanks, Katy and Coal Train Railroad for sharing the love. Thanks to you, our family's finally all jazzed up.
For your chance to win a copy of Coal Train Railroad for your family, leave a comment. For a second chance to win, tweet a link to this review and leave a comment letting me know. For a third chance to win, blog a link to it and leave another comment. The winner will be chosen at random on Friday at midnight.
Good luck!
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Tuesday, February 02, 2010
Saturday, November 28, 2009
::: it's been a hard day's night :::
This week, I have all of my kids at home. It hasn't been like this for a while, with Houdin being gone at discipleship training for the past couple of months and Bard off at college. It won't be like this again for a while. On Monday, Bard will head back to college and on Tuesday, 18-year-old Houdin will leave for an eight-month outreach placement to Africa. But while they're all here, I'm reminded of the dynamics of this family, both good and not-so-good. The changes we're experiencing are positive; we're all learning things as we move through this transition towards more permanent change. I'm taking notes, my friends. I'm taking lots of notes.
With all of the Thicket Dweller kids under one roof again, plus a couple of friends along for the ride, it's impossible to avoid a jam session. Most of the family used real instruments to belt out The Beatles, Coldplay, Muse, Leonard Cohen and Kimya Dawson, but a couple who are not as musically adept and a couple who are just plain goofy joined in on the Beatles Rock Band instruments. Can you believe that these silly people played for hours? HOURS? After serving a second dinner and a third dinner and a couple of snacks and a few desserts, this roadie headed for bed. I'm told they knocked off for the night around 3:00 A.M.
With all of the Thicket Dweller kids under one roof again, plus a couple of friends along for the ride, it's impossible to avoid a jam session. Most of the family used real instruments to belt out The Beatles, Coldplay, Muse, Leonard Cohen and Kimya Dawson, but a couple who are not as musically adept and a couple who are just plain goofy joined in on the Beatles Rock Band instruments. Can you believe that these silly people played for hours? HOURS? After serving a second dinner and a third dinner and a couple of snacks and a few desserts, this roadie headed for bed. I'm told they knocked off for the night around 3:00 A.M.
This house will be so different when they're gone.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
::: play that funky music :::
It was my kind of night, this one. It was the kind of night where you wish sleep were optional, and you wish daylight would just be an extension of nighttime and not a wake-up call from the world of responsibilities. It was the kind of night you have when you've been snowed in, but you had time to prepare, or when there's a big thunderstorm and the lights go out, but your husband can somehow still magically play the electric guitar. I guess you could say it was a voluntary snow-in, without the snow.
It was just the four of us, Bo and Sweetheart and The Baby and me. I'd taken Monet to spend the night at a friend's and had told Sweetheart how to make cheesy potatoes, asking her to give it a shot while I was gone. Daddy would be home to help, I told her, but it was pretty simple, and I assured her she could do it on her own.
When I returned, the house smelled like cheesy potatoes, and the girls were busy giggling and running and jumping excitedly. Sweetheart had made the cheesy potatoes with barely any help; she'd done everything but chop the onions, which Pop had done for her.
Bo showed Sweetheart and The Baby a video he'd been given recently of the first public performance of a worship song he wrote, and then a video of songwriter/pianist Ken Medema creating an improvised song into which he wove Bo's worship chorus. The girls were awed. So was I.
We sat together at the dinner table, Sweetheart's potatoes, my homemade dill pickles, hot ham and cheese paninis that The Baby and I made together, and joined hands. Together we sang Bo's chorus, the girls proudly declaring each word:
"Breathe out, breathe in and be filled.
Breathe out, breathe in and be filled.
Breathe out, breathe in and be filled with the Spirit of God."
And the singing just kept on all through the night. Earlier in the week, I had shown The Baby this video of The Cactus Cuties performing the National Anthem, and she was riveted. She sings constantly already, but this spurred her on even more.
So at the dinner table, she treated us to her own rendition of Amazing Grace. Five times. And then again after dinner as Bo played along on Monet's electric guitar and The Baby stood on the arm of the loveseat, arms spread wide, head thrown back, eyes closed and eyebrows raised, belting it out. SANGin' it, I tell you.
And still the singing didn't stop. Bo started playing riffs from Men at Work, and then it progressed to other 80's songs, and I just couldn't help it. I had to pull out the iPod Touch and look up lyrics, singing along to "You're the Biggest Part of Me" and "The Breakup Song" and "I Won't Hold You Back Now." Bo even talked me into singing "Brass in Pocket" by The Pretenders because he's pretty convinced that I sound like Chrissie Hynde when I sing. Why couldn't he think I sound like Karin Bergquist? She has an Ohio song, too, you know.
We even got into some of the one-hit-wonders, like Sheriff's "When I'm with You" and The Call's "I Still Believe" and Eric Carmen's "Change of Heart." And we couldn't let the night go by without singing "She Blinded Me with Science."
And then, after midnight rolled around, it was time for bed for the girls. Bo and I surfed over to Hulu and watched Jim and Pam's wedding, which had to be one of The Best Office episodes ever. I've watched that YouTube video of the incredibly fun wedding processional over and over, and I've cried every time I've watched the bride dance down the aisle. Kudos to The Office writers for working this into the show.
And now Bo is snoring, and I'm sitting here filled up and joyful. And tired.
Hey. Go dance and sing a little bit. It's good for you.
It was just the four of us, Bo and Sweetheart and The Baby and me. I'd taken Monet to spend the night at a friend's and had told Sweetheart how to make cheesy potatoes, asking her to give it a shot while I was gone. Daddy would be home to help, I told her, but it was pretty simple, and I assured her she could do it on her own.
When I returned, the house smelled like cheesy potatoes, and the girls were busy giggling and running and jumping excitedly. Sweetheart had made the cheesy potatoes with barely any help; she'd done everything but chop the onions, which Pop had done for her.
Bo showed Sweetheart and The Baby a video he'd been given recently of the first public performance of a worship song he wrote, and then a video of songwriter/pianist Ken Medema creating an improvised song into which he wove Bo's worship chorus. The girls were awed. So was I.
We sat together at the dinner table, Sweetheart's potatoes, my homemade dill pickles, hot ham and cheese paninis that The Baby and I made together, and joined hands. Together we sang Bo's chorus, the girls proudly declaring each word:
"Breathe out, breathe in and be filled.
Breathe out, breathe in and be filled.
Breathe out, breathe in and be filled with the Spirit of God."
And the singing just kept on all through the night. Earlier in the week, I had shown The Baby this video of The Cactus Cuties performing the National Anthem, and she was riveted. She sings constantly already, but this spurred her on even more.
So at the dinner table, she treated us to her own rendition of Amazing Grace. Five times. And then again after dinner as Bo played along on Monet's electric guitar and The Baby stood on the arm of the loveseat, arms spread wide, head thrown back, eyes closed and eyebrows raised, belting it out. SANGin' it, I tell you.
And still the singing didn't stop. Bo started playing riffs from Men at Work, and then it progressed to other 80's songs, and I just couldn't help it. I had to pull out the iPod Touch and look up lyrics, singing along to "You're the Biggest Part of Me" and "The Breakup Song" and "I Won't Hold You Back Now." Bo even talked me into singing "Brass in Pocket" by The Pretenders because he's pretty convinced that I sound like Chrissie Hynde when I sing. Why couldn't he think I sound like Karin Bergquist? She has an Ohio song, too, you know.
We even got into some of the one-hit-wonders, like Sheriff's "When I'm with You" and The Call's "I Still Believe" and Eric Carmen's "Change of Heart." And we couldn't let the night go by without singing "She Blinded Me with Science."
And then, after midnight rolled around, it was time for bed for the girls. Bo and I surfed over to Hulu and watched Jim and Pam's wedding, which had to be one of The Best Office episodes ever. I've watched that YouTube video of the incredibly fun wedding processional over and over, and I've cried every time I've watched the bride dance down the aisle. Kudos to The Office writers for working this into the show.
And now Bo is snoring, and I'm sitting here filled up and joyful. And tired.
Hey. Go dance and sing a little bit. It's good for you.
Wednesday, September 16, 2009
::: someone stop this train :::
These days, with life moving at top speed, I have to remind myself that this moving forward, this leap from one day to the next, is God's design. He had a reason for creating the tempo of our lives the way He did. While I was home today alone, feeling very strange about the fact that my kids are growing and changing and are currently scattered all over the country, this song by John Mayer leaked out of my iTunes and into my brain. While my flesh tells me that I want to stop this train, that I don't like the bags under my eyes and the gray in my hair and the steady decrease in energy, my spirit tells me that it's good that this train is moving forward.
No, I'm not color blind
I know the world is black and white
Try to keep an open mind but...
I just can't sleep on this tonight
Stop this train I want to get off and go home again
I can't take the speed it's moving in
I know I can't
But honestly won't someone stop this train
Don't know how else to say it, don't want to see my parents go
One generation's length away
From fighting life out on my own
Stop this train
I want to get off and go home again
I can't take the speed it's moving in
I know I can't but honestly won't someone stop this train
So scared of getting older
I'm only good at being young
So I play the numbers game to find a way to say that life has just begun
Had a talk with my old man
Said help me understand
He said turn 68, you'll renegotiate
Don't stop this train
Don't for a minute change the place you're in
Don't think I couldn't ever understand
I tried my hand
John, honestly we'll never stop this train
Once in a while when it's good
It'll feel like it should
And they're all still around
And you're still safe and sound
And you don't miss a thing
'til you cry when you're driving away in the dark.
Singing stop this train I want to get off and go home again
I can't take this speed it's moving in
I know I can't
Cause now I see I'll never stop this train
John Mayer
No, I'm not color blind
I know the world is black and white
Try to keep an open mind but...
I just can't sleep on this tonight
Stop this train I want to get off and go home again
I can't take the speed it's moving in
I know I can't
But honestly won't someone stop this train
Don't know how else to say it, don't want to see my parents go
One generation's length away
From fighting life out on my own
Stop this train
I want to get off and go home again
I can't take the speed it's moving in
I know I can't but honestly won't someone stop this train
So scared of getting older
I'm only good at being young
So I play the numbers game to find a way to say that life has just begun
Had a talk with my old man
Said help me understand
He said turn 68, you'll renegotiate
Don't stop this train
Don't for a minute change the place you're in
Don't think I couldn't ever understand
I tried my hand
John, honestly we'll never stop this train
Once in a while when it's good
It'll feel like it should
And they're all still around
And you're still safe and sound
And you don't miss a thing
'til you cry when you're driving away in the dark.
Singing stop this train I want to get off and go home again
I can't take this speed it's moving in
I know I can't
Cause now I see I'll never stop this train
John Mayer
labels:
childrearing,
music,
photos
Thursday, September 10, 2009
::: at midnight :::
Dogs are barking.
Drums are beating.
Piano is pounding.
Fan is blowing.
Laundry is waiting.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
School is frustrating.
Homework is baffling.
Sunday's approaching;
Houdin will be leaving.
Laundry is waiting.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
Book is inspiring.
God is amazing.
Life is so challenging.
Morning is coming.
Bus will be waiting.
I am stretching.
I am stretching.
I am stretching.
Drums are beating.
Piano is pounding.
Fan is blowing.
Laundry is waiting.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
School is frustrating.
Homework is baffling.
Sunday's approaching;
Houdin will be leaving.
Laundry is waiting.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
I am stressing.
Book is inspiring.
God is amazing.
Life is so challenging.
Morning is coming.
Bus will be waiting.
I am stretching.
I am stretching.
I am stretching.
Monday, September 07, 2009
::: now my feet won't touch the ground :::
The weekend was a beautiful one; visits with loved ones, hugs from nieces and nephews, lots of music and dancing and laughing, and a beautiful bride and a handsome groom.
My little sister, who is actually Bo's little sister, who often comments on this blog as Lil Sis, married her sweetheart, Bishop, on Saturday. The outdoor wedding was blessed with a beautiful day, a group of loving people in attendance, Bo and his brother playing Coldplay's "Now My Feet Won't Touch the Ground" on lap dulcimer and guitar, and a whole host of laughing (and, occasionally, crying) children. At one point, the sing-songy serenade of the ice cream truck floated through the park, children and adults flocking to get a cool, sweet treat.
It was such an honor to be a part of Lil Sis's wedding, to do one of the things that I love best, which is to snap photos here and there and take a bit of video. Every time I would point my camera at Lil Sis, that funny little five-year-old girl peeked through her veil, reminding me just how quickly life skitters by.
Lil Sis's groom is so patient and enduring, with a great sense of humor and a no-nonsense approach to relationships. He tells it like it is without being demeaning or angry, and I appreciate that so much about him, about that man who doesn't let the wool be pulled over his eyes and continues to state what he believes. "You have ideals," his new father-in-law said, and it seems that it's true.
The two of them are iron sharpening iron, and they, along with Lil Sis's little girl RJ, are going to do amazing things as a family.



My little sister, who is actually Bo's little sister, who often comments on this blog as Lil Sis, married her sweetheart, Bishop, on Saturday. The outdoor wedding was blessed with a beautiful day, a group of loving people in attendance, Bo and his brother playing Coldplay's "Now My Feet Won't Touch the Ground" on lap dulcimer and guitar, and a whole host of laughing (and, occasionally, crying) children. At one point, the sing-songy serenade of the ice cream truck floated through the park, children and adults flocking to get a cool, sweet treat.
It was such an honor to be a part of Lil Sis's wedding, to do one of the things that I love best, which is to snap photos here and there and take a bit of video. Every time I would point my camera at Lil Sis, that funny little five-year-old girl peeked through her veil, reminding me just how quickly life skitters by.
Lil Sis's groom is so patient and enduring, with a great sense of humor and a no-nonsense approach to relationships. He tells it like it is without being demeaning or angry, and I appreciate that so much about him, about that man who doesn't let the wool be pulled over his eyes and continues to state what he believes. "You have ideals," his new father-in-law said, and it seems that it's true.
The two of them are iron sharpening iron, and they, along with Lil Sis's little girl RJ, are going to do amazing things as a family.



Thursday, September 03, 2009
::: if i get there before you do, i'll cut a hole and pull you through :::
Up in the air so blue?
Oh, I do think it the pleasantest thing
Ever a child can do!
Up in the air and over the wall,
Till I can see so wide,
Rivers and trees and cattle and all
Over the countryside—
Till I look down on the garden green,
Down on the roof so brown—
Up in the air I go flying again,
Up in the air and down!
~Robert Louis Stevenson
This is one of the girls' favorite poems, and when we read daily from The Child's Garden of Verses, this one is almost always read. The older children sang a version of it for choir.
Isn't swinging one of those simple, lovely things that makes childhood grand? One of my favorite memories is of my dad pushing me on my little metal swingset in the back yard, me soaring, he loudly singing, "Swing lo, sweet cherry-ought. Comin' for to carry me home." I can remember how I would rush to the swingset at the school next to my aunt's house, even into my teens, when my friend and I would pump our feet to the rhythm of our own voices singing The Steve Miller Band's Fly Like an Eagle.
It's great fun as a child. But somewhere along the line, we decide, or someone tells us, that we're too old for it, and then, when we want to return to it, our bottoms are too big for the seats, or our feet drag on the ground. But if we can get past those parts, it's still a simple, lovely thing to do.
And swinging in sync with a friend? Ah. Magical, isn't it?
I loved watching Sweetheart, The Baby, and their friend Lydia fly through the air, giggling, trying to slow down and speed up to match each other's flight. And even the competition that took place was interesting to watch. The synchronized swinging almost became an obsession with some, and a non-issue with others, and for those some who took it seriously, the fact that no one would sync with her was a great insult to her psyche.
Life is like that. There are things I take way to seriously, and someone might be able to say to me that it's no big deal, that I should just shrug it off, that it doesn't really matter anyway. But that doesn't erase my human emotions, my desire for relationship, my confusion when someone I love, or someone I try to love, rejects me, deals with me callously, or misunderstands my intentions. Why does it matter? Why does it bother me so? Why, when people who love me, people who really know me, people I respect and admire, tell me to forget about it, shrug it off, can't I do so?
I must not be the only one. I was listening to a repeat show on This American Life, an NPR radio program that I download as a podcast each week. This week's theme was The Kindness of Strangers. In it, Brett Leveridge tells the story of his experience of standing on a subway platform. A stranger, which, of course, means someone Brett doesn't even know, probably someone that no one waiting on the subway knows, meanders along the platform, and chooses people as if choosing players for a kickball game: "You're in. You're out. You can stay. You have to leave." But it wasn't like the people who were told they had to go left. They just ignored this strange person. Not Brett, though. For some reason, as the guy approached Brett, all he could think about was how he hoped the guy would approve of him. A guy he didn't even know. A total stranger.
So if, as humans, it matters to us that a total stranger approves of us, how much more important must it be that someone we know, someone who at least in modicum knows us, rejects us?
This is why, I believe, the person of Christ is so compelling. He was, and is, what we long to be. Perfect. Without sin. Blameless. And we long so much for that perfection and blamelessness, for that relationship and acceptance, that it's almost unbearable when someone rejects us for reasons we can't fully understand, even if it's a person we don't particularly like. Even if it's a person we can't really stand at all.
But here was Jesus, and, yeah, like I said. Perfect. Without sin. Blameless. And still, He had enemies. He was despised and rejected. Those He loved denied Him, betrayed Him, doubted Him. What must that have felt like for Him, who didn't just feel He hadn't done anything wrong. He really hadn't done anything wrong!
And so I know that, with all of my flaws and failures, I can't expect to be unconditionally loved by anyone but God, but this feeling of swinging so high, of laughing and and feeling that weightlessness, and laughing, and then falling and scooping so low, and reaching out my hand to sync with someone who chooses to keep theirs death-gripped tightly on the chains, pumping their feet so that they can rise higher and higher and higher than I, is always a bit of a shock to me. Hey, I think, wasn't this supposed to be fun?
And on the worst of days, I just want to jump off of the swing altogether.
My son told me recently that it takes seven positive comments to counteract one negative one. Seven. For every. single. negative. So if you get totally chewed out by someone, told in every way how you've failed, what a loser and terrible person you are, just imagine how much encouraging and building up your loved ones have to do to cancel out what that one uncaring, selfish, unthinking person did.
Wow.
No wonder it's so hard to love. It takes persistence, doesn't it? We have to keep undoing all that's been done, not just by us, but by others, too.
I guess that's why I want to be the one who swings next to you, who, when you reach out your hand for someone to sync with, grabs that hand and sticks right next to you, keeping time with your rhythm, no matter how high or low you go.
Sometimes I'm up, sometimes I'm down
Coming for to carry me home
But still my soul feels heavenly bound
Coming for to carry me home
The brightest day that I can say
Coming for to carry me home
When Jesus washed my sins away,
Coming for to carry me home.
labels:
childhood,
depression,
difficult people,
essays,
friends,
music,
poetry
Monday, August 31, 2009
::: son, can you play me a memory? :::
Remember those games we used to play as children? They're the ones my daughters still play now, like cutie catchers, and M.A.S.H., where a group of giggling girls determine your lifelong fate. On a ripped-out sheet of notebook paper, they ask you to list different boys' names, and types of dwellings (mansion, apartment, shack or house, which is where the game gets its name), and numbers, and states, and then you choose a number, which is written very blackly in the center of the page. And then, the counting begins. One by one, your choices are narrowed, until your lies future scrawled out on the wide-ruled looseleaf before you--you will marry Victor and live in an apartment in Tahiti, tooling around in an AMC Gremlin. And you will have kids, unless you chose a "zero" for one of the numbers. You'll have six kids, or fourteen kids, or two kids. If make the mistake of thinking the number means how much money you're going to make per year, you may end up with 120,000 kids.
I don't remember a lot about my preferences for children when I was a child. I thought more about where I would live, what I would grow, what animals I would have and what kinds of clothes I would wear than if or how many children I would love.
But along came Bo, and I loved him, and, more importantly at the time and to the plot of this essay, I was attracted to him, and children were part of that equation. And I knew just a few things about these arriving beings. Here's what I knew:
- They would love and follow God and emulate Christ;
- They would be stunningly beautiful;
- They would be dressed in trendy clothes from The Gap and Banana Republic and, more importantly, they would love vintage thrift clothes;
- They would want for nothing;
- They would love nature, hiking, swimming, canoeing, and gardening;
- They would love the folk music;
- They would be incredible musicians, maybe even virtuosos;
- They would be brilliant, obedient and respectful;
- My daughters would be my closest confidantes;
- My sons would be my fiercest defenders.
One child, however, decided pretty much from day one that he wasn't all that thrilled with my plan. He arrived later than the doctor had estimated, took longer to be born, had a true knot in his umbilical cord, weighed more and measured longer than anyone had imagined.
As he grew, his first words were "shub up!" and "I can doooo it!" and "yeave me a-yone!" He wanted to be fiercely independent, yet didn't quite have the tools to achieve that independence. Lessons at home proved frustrating for everyone involved. Anything that could be taken apart was. Anything that could be broken was. Including, many times, my mother heart.
And while I tried to push my plans on him, he pushed right back. My plan was for a son who was naturally kind and respectful, good-natured and loving, well-dressed and tidy. He wore wrinkled t-shirts and stained jeans to church, was mouthy to me and other family members, wasn't affectionate or kindhearted. And he certainly wasn't my fiercest defender. To engage him in learning, we tried placing him in private school for a year, pulling him back out, moving to the country, giving him animal projects, encouraging his interests, increasing the household structure, loosening the household structure, abandoning the household structure. I spent evenings pouring over parenting books, on my knees in prayer, and beside his bed trying to reason him into doing his lessons or clean his room or help around the house or stick with his current interest, even if it wasn't my current interest.
Because what I wanted? I wanted him to play an instrument. And what I really wanted was for him to play piano. So as soon as we could find a piano teacher we could afford, I signed all the kids up, and we would make a weekly trek, every Monday, to spend two hours at the piano teacher's house. And every week, he would show great promise. And every week, as soon as we would leave the piano teacher's house, the lesson would be forgotten and little or no practice would ensue, regardless of the reminders, motivators or bribes I handed out.
I don't want to play piano, he would say. That's something you want me to do. It's not something I'm interested in. And we'd have a discussion about how many adults wish they could play, how you never meet an adult who plays piano and says, "Man, I've always regretted sticking with my lessons." But that didn't help. He wanted to play computer games or set up his army men or strap CO2 cartridges to the girls' dolls and set them on fire, delighting in the ensuing explosion.
I don't understand this creature.
But somehow, he still has my heart firmly in his grasp.
This boy, who has been the source of so much frustration, self-doubt, with whom interaction has caused me so much regret for my lack of patience and angry nature, has also impressed me with his strength, creative thinking and varied interests.
Finally, we decided on a graduation party, and he expressed his strong preference for having it here, at our home. He did a lot of work to get ready for it, including building a stone stairway up our front hill.
We had a small ceremony on the hillside that is our little apple orchard, blankets and quilts laid out for people to sit upon. Bo said a few words and opened us with a song, the Doxology, and then our pastor gave a short teaching to Zach--to all of us--about the lack of wisdom in most commencement speeches. Bo shared his thoughts, his memories of Houdin as a newborn baby, long and red, and the weight that came with realizing that he was the father of a son. Before he had finished his first sentence, I knew that there was nothing I could say; I was too emotional to speak. And then, Houdin spoke. He hadn't shared with me what he was going to say, hadn't written it down.
What he shared was an answer to my many years of prayer. He gave a short history of his life, how he arrived at the point where he is today. He talked about our other house, our tiny cape cod on a busy street with a little postage-stamp-sized yard, and how, there, he was given the freedom to learn, how he could choose any subject, and we would delve fully into it, exhausting all possibilities for further information before moving on to the next subject.
And he talked about the move to where we are now, this house in the country. He talked about the learning opportunities he was given, how he was allowed to be a part of the building process of this new home, climbing on the roof, pulling wiring, installing hurricane clips in the attic, nailing down shingles, carrying cement blocks. He talked about the things we let him do, and the things we made him do, and he said that he was grateful for us. He was grateful, he said, that his mother gave him the freedom to learn, and his father gave him the discipline.
I wish I could convey the feelings I had at that moment, and how glad I was that we'd decided to have that ceremony, even though there were times when I was so overwhelmed and discouraged that we came close to calling it all off.
We closed by singing a family favorite, Rich Mullins' Step by Step, a song I taught the older kids when they were just toddlers, when they would stand on step stools beside me in our old house, washing and drying dishes, and singing and singing and singing. Now here we were, surrounded by wonderful friends and family, cutting the apron strings that were tied to this boy who has done a fairly good job of driving me mad.
A few days ago, when I had some errands to run, Houdin asked me if he could stay at the church while I did my running around. See, there's a piano there, and over the past few months, he has taken to looking up the chords to his favorite songs and banging them out daily.
In just two weeks, we will load up a car full of stuff and kids, and we will attend another ceremony, this one a commissioning to send Houdin to Africa for a ten-month venture into voluntary service.
Day by day, as the time to send him comes closer, I become more aware of what this means, of how far away he'll be and how much can happen over the course of ten months. My mother heart needs prayer, comfort and healing before I can offer the same to my boy. While I know that this trip is a good thing, that it's has been orchestrated by God and that much good will come of it, my nature is to hold on, to change my mind, so panic, to worry about all of the terrible things that could possibly happen. Ten months away. Ten months. On the other side of the world.
A short time ago, we welcomed a young man named Rejoice into our lives. Six months before, his mother had stood in Africa and said goodbye to him as he ventured to the other side of the world for a year. We did our best to give him a home here, to welcome him as one of us, to make him a part of our family. I pray that Houdin, too, will find a family on African soil who will look after him while he's away from us.
And I pray that there's a piano there for him to play.
labels:
childrearing,
family,
friends,
graduations,
Houdin,
music,
vindication
Thursday, August 20, 2009
::: if i leave here tomorrow, will you still remember me? :::
In Bard's Wonder Book, an interactive paper journal I started for her when she was seven, I wrote the following:
Under any other circumstance, a woman whose daughter has gone after eighteen years of living at home would likely be heaped with support. If you had died, say, or gotten married, or run away, or been abducted. Actually, had I lost anyone after eighteen years, or even eighteen months--a break up or divorce or other loss--people would call me, I'd be in some kind of a support group, women from church would bring me casseroles and jello salads. But in this circumstance--"Well, gee. She's just at college!" Never mind that the house is void of her music, her laughter, her guitar, her conversation. "What's the big deal? Get over it!"I hadn't started out grief-stricken. As a matter of fact, I was kind of blasé about the whole thing, having indulged myself in the process of getting Bard into college by making transcripts, visiting colleges, sending paperwork, talking to financial advisors, and then celebrating not only her acceptance letters, but the steady stream of scholarship awards, which was sweet vindication for this mom who had been told that home learning would ruin my child's education.
While I was gloating, I hadn't really thought about the fact that the end result of this process would be that my daughter would be leaving home.
And even had I thought that she would be leaving, once she chose a school that was only an hour away, I hadn't thought about the fact that she wouldn't be living in our house. She'd be taking her loyalty, dependability, devious sense of humor, midnight music making, and, most of all, her delightful companionship along with her.
It wasn't until a church friend asked me, just the week before we would be moving Bard to school, how I was doing.
"I'm fine!" I answered chipperly. "It's great! I think we're ready!"
To which she offhandedly replied, "When we took Jonathan to Goshen the first day of his freshman year, that was the last time he lived at home. He went on service trips for Christmas and summers, and then he got married and moved to Virginia."
Wait...what?
You mean, I thought, next week could be the last time my child lives at home? EVER?!?
And that's when the waterworks started.
At one point, it got so bad that when she simply walked into my room, I was reduced to a blubbery mass of tears.
"Mom," she chided playfully, "I feel like I'm dead! I feel like you're planning my funeral!"
Houdin, who had just ventured down the hall, strolled in, passed Bard without acknowledging her presence, embraced me with mock seriousness and hushed, "When are the calling hours?"
After taking her to her dorm that first day, going through the orientation process, and saying my goodbyes, I climbed into the car with my two younger daughters. Since Bard had packed so much stuff, and all of the family wanted to see her off, we'd driven two vehicles. But my vision was so obscured by tears, I had to pull over in the closest parking lot and let myself bawl. The girls draped their little bodies around me and joined my mourning, and we all wailed together, albeit quietly since we were in a public place not two thousand feet from Bard's dorm.
Now, before you come down too hard on me, you have to realize a couple of things:
- I never put my child on the kindergarten bus;
- I never watched her drive away after getting her license (she still isn't a driver, at 19);
- I never saw her whisked away on her first date by some strange boy.
Because unlike women I've overheard sighing disdainfully in the early August school-supplies line while their children finger every impulse item on the shelf, I have never uttered the words, "I can't wait until they're back in school."
And this is because you have to realize something else, too.
I like my kids. I like my daughter. She's my friend. And I miss her when she's gone.
I'm glad she's at school, having fun, making new friends and keeping the old. It's cool that she's a course assistant this year and that she'll be starting into some of the classes for her majors. It's nifty that she used her summer-job-at-the-greenhouse money to buy a new cherry sunburst Fender Strat and a Line 6 amp and hopes to play in a band with a group of friends.
It's great that moving day went extremely well, that Houdin and the girls helped extra much and Bard's friend Grape tagged along to lend a hand, since Monet was at school and husband Bo was at work (though we did stop by for a brief hug).
It's fabulous that we got to spend moving day shopping for a new pair of Chuck Taylors (can you believe she's been wearing the same pair since her freshman year in high school?!?), eating at ChicFila, and arranging her new dorm room, a suite she'll share with five other girls.
And it's cool that I'll put the finishing touches on cleaning her room today, and it will stay clean in between visits.
But it'll be awfully quiet around here without her midnight music, her insane sense of humor, and her great companionship.
When you like your own child enough to miss them when they're gone, I do believe that's a good thing.
labels:
Bard,
Bo,
college,
homelearning,
Houdin,
Monet,
music,
Sweetheart,
The Baby,
vindication
Monday, March 23, 2009
Right Now
Listening to: U2's No Line on the Horizon. Favorites: Moment of Surrender, Unknown Caller, White as Snow.
Cleaning: under my bed. I don't know if I've ever seen anything quite so disgusting and dusty! Finally taking down my Christmas decorations from my bedroom. They were so pretty and peaceful, I just didn't want to do it until it was officially Spring.
Thinking: about grace, compassion, justice, truth, wisdom.
Dreaming: of a worry-free vacation. Probably won't happen this side of heaven!
Worrying about: money, provision, though I know I shouldn't. I do what I can and the rest is in God's hands.
Remembering: when money really, really was a problem. Repossessed car, threat of losing our home, young children, no groceries. I have so very much and need to remember how many have so little.
Talking: to my daughter on the cell phone. The school year is almost over, and end of the year stuff is due. The opening night of the play she's in, God's Favorite, is Friday night.
Processing: complicated events from the weekend.
What's new with you? What are you doing right now?
Cleaning: under my bed. I don't know if I've ever seen anything quite so disgusting and dusty! Finally taking down my Christmas decorations from my bedroom. They were so pretty and peaceful, I just didn't want to do it until it was officially Spring.
Thinking: about grace, compassion, justice, truth, wisdom.
Dreaming: of a worry-free vacation. Probably won't happen this side of heaven!
Worrying about: money, provision, though I know I shouldn't. I do what I can and the rest is in God's hands.
Remembering: when money really, really was a problem. Repossessed car, threat of losing our home, young children, no groceries. I have so very much and need to remember how many have so little.
Talking: to my daughter on the cell phone. The school year is almost over, and end of the year stuff is due. The opening night of the play she's in, God's Favorite, is Friday night.
Processing: complicated events from the weekend.
What's new with you? What are you doing right now?
Thursday, March 12, 2009
::: music from the masses :::
Last night there was a lot of musical goings-on in the Today's Lessons household. It carries on today with Bard teaching Monet some chords on his new electric guitar, Sweetheart playing piano and The Baby singing silly-voiced opera amidst the scent of the eight cheesecakes Houdin is baking for a wedding shower on Sunday. While the busyness is going on downstairs, I thought I'd sneak away for a quick blog post to show you what makes this mama's heart sing. When I'm done here, it's down for a quick rest while listening to Fahrenheit 451 read by Ray Bradbury. Can you believe I've never read it? Quite thought provoking.
Anyway, enjoy the show, folks.
Anyway, enjoy the show, folks.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Sunrise
I would make this enchantment for you
A burgundy heart-shaped medallion
With a window that you could look through
So that when all the mirrors are angry
With your faults and all you must do
You could peek through that heart-shaped medallion
And see you from my point of view
~David Wilcox
Thursday, January 08, 2009
Stream of Consciousness Whilst Avoiding Cleaning My Room
I have a stack of papers on my floor that need to be gone through.Most of them are probably trash, but I can't just throw them away.
I have to filter through them.
And then I have to burn the ones I don't want.
Identity theft is so stupid.
"Jesus in New Orleans" is playing on iTunes.
Some days, I want to clean.
Some days, I want to stay in bed.
Some days, I want to go away.
Some days, I want to stay inside.
What kind of day is this?
Bard is home for three more days.
Today, she's getting her hair cut and colored.
I have a grocery list the size of someone's arm.
Remember Ed Grimley?
That was funny stuff.
But I think it jumped the shark with the cartoon, don't you?
I mean, watching Martin Short himself was 98% of the fun.
Why animate that?
Who's your favorite comedy actor right now?
I think mine's either Jack Black or Steve Carell.
The Office is my current obsession.
HTML is amazing.
I need to dust.
"Stella's Tarantella" is playing now.
The Baby loves this song.
She's not much of a baby anymore.
Actually, she's a pretty amazing little girl who is almost six years old.
I love birthdays.
What will we do for this birthday?
When she turned four, my friend Kim painted her a picture.
It was a pink and purple birthday.
There were balloons, and windows, and buildings and guitars and a cake with four candles.
It's one of my favorite things.
It's hanging downstairs.
Are we still friends?
I miss our walks.
My running has stopped.
I want to run again.
Monet and I are hoping to train for a 5K, but we've not been doing very well.
I bought him a pair of running shoes.
I think we'll do it.
But when?
"Spark" by Over the Rhine is playing now.
It's one of my favorite songs.
Especially this line:
"Obsessions with self-preservation
faded when I threw my fear away.
It's not a thing you can imagine.
You either lose your fear or spend your life
with one foot in the grave."
That line was an epiphany for me.
Lose my fear.
What's the worst thing that could happen to me?
No one can steal my soul.
The next life is so glorious.
Eternal bliss.
Oneness with Christ.
Knowledge. Happiness. Freedom from pain.
Wake up dreaming.
Only love can turn this around.
Jesus was an incredible man.
I wish more people could see him and not what his followers do to him.
It's time to wrap this up.
It's time to love life.
Blessings on this amazing day.
labels:
Bard,
epiphanies,
jesus,
Monet,
music,
stream of consciousness,
The Baby
Wednesday, July 09, 2008
Some of the Musicians in My Life...
I caught this couple of minutes of video of Bo, my dear husband, and his brother doing an impromptu rendition of "My Sweet Lord."
Tuesday, May 27, 2008
Some grad photos...
Bard graduated from high school this weekend. The ceremony was lovely, and we had the very perfect weather for her open house on Sunday. We made bins and bins of food--barbecued chicken, baked beans, potato salad, veggies and dip, cake, cookies--and we had a wonderful crowd of people to share it all with.
Now, she's off for the summer and will be a freshman at a Christian college on a full scholarship (room and board, books, tuition, AND a laptop all paid!) this Fall. I will miss her greatly, but she'll only be about an hour away, and will be closer geographically to some of her friends when she's there that she has been at home.
It's been a great ride, learning with this girl, from the moment she was born, even up through today. I look forward to many years of learning with my younger ones, too.
Now, she's off for the summer and will be a freshman at a Christian college on a full scholarship (room and board, books, tuition, AND a laptop all paid!) this Fall. I will miss her greatly, but she'll only be about an hour away, and will be closer geographically to some of her friends when she's there that she has been at home.
It's been a great ride, learning with this girl, from the moment she was born, even up through today. I look forward to many years of learning with my younger ones, too.
With Sweetheart, Mom, Dad and Grandma.
Aunt Marilyn and Cousin Bella on the hammock with Uncle Aaron providing the motion.
Friday, February 29, 2008
Hosting Houseconcerts
It was then that our dream of building a home came true. With a lot of cooperation from friends and a lot of hard work and perseverance, we were able to build a house that could not only house our growing family, but our love of gathering as well.
So, for the past several years, we have hosted several houseconcerts--musicians from all different genres and geographic locations--and have welcomed guests from nearby and far away. The musicians bring their unique style and feel, and the guests bring food and applause, and I get to sit on my couch, surrounded by creativity, inspiration, good friends and candles, and pinch myself, wondering if this is all really happening.
Tonight, we will welcome our very first female solo performers, Jan Krist and Kitty Donohoe for a small, intimate houseconcert on this snowy day. We'll all snuggle in and pinch ourselves. Maybe we'll even get snowed in and we'll all have to share this big house long into the night.
When things are kind of rough, and times are a bit frustrating, I remember that this was a dream that God brought to fruition, and I find myself amazed.
You can look at The Sprouted Acorn website for information on upcoming concerts this year. If you find yourself in our area, stop in and say hi, and we can share this big house--and the dream--with each other.
labels:
dreams,
God,
houseconcerts,
music,
visions
Tuesday, April 24, 2007
Saturday, April 07, 2007
For Firefly
Most of us will never know how dark this world can seem.
When life becomes more nightmare than a dream.
So to all of you who have survived a visit to the edge,
I trust that you will understand this pledge.
I promise I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I swear by all that's holy, I will not give up the fight.
I'll drink down death like water before I ever come again
To that dark place where I might make
The choice for life to end.
I've found that as I've traveled through the inscape of my life
That mountain tops make valleys in between.
And when that nameless sadness like a cloud comes over me,
I look back on all the brightness I have seen.
And realize that though my world might seem so torn apart
Most often it is joy that breaks the heart.
And that I am the richest woman though I must beg for bread
For the very One who might condemn has called me friend instead.
I promise I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I swear by all that's holy, I will not give up the fight.
I'll drink down death like water before I ever come again
To that dark place where I might make
The choice for life to end.
I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I will not give up the fight.
Michael Card
When life becomes more nightmare than a dream.
So to all of you who have survived a visit to the edge,
I trust that you will understand this pledge.
I promise I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I swear by all that's holy, I will not give up the fight.
I'll drink down death like water before I ever come again
To that dark place where I might make
The choice for life to end.
I've found that as I've traveled through the inscape of my life
That mountain tops make valleys in between.
And when that nameless sadness like a cloud comes over me,
I look back on all the brightness I have seen.
And realize that though my world might seem so torn apart
Most often it is joy that breaks the heart.
And that I am the richest woman though I must beg for bread
For the very One who might condemn has called me friend instead.
I promise I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I swear by all that's holy, I will not give up the fight.
I'll drink down death like water before I ever come again
To that dark place where I might make
The choice for life to end.
I will always leave the darkness for the light.
I will not give up the fight.
Michael Card
labels:
depression,
music,
poetry
Saturday, March 24, 2007
Preparing for Pierce
I'm exhausted but wide awake. This time tomorrow evening, I'll be basking in the afterglow of our March houseconcert--Pierce Pettis.
I'm so thrilled to host Pierce at The Sprouted Acorn--honored that he'd say "yes" to such a small venue when people of less stature than he have said no. Maybe it will help us get our foot in the door elsewhere. Bring some good music to this sleepy 5,000 horse town.
And the numbers will help, too. As of now, the count is at about 66 guests. Sixty-six! That's a whole lotta people milling around my kitchen, ya know? I'm really looking forward.
The cheesecakes are in various stages of done-ness. Fifteen-year-old Houdin made two--a milk chocolate oreo crust cheesecake and a turtle cheesecake, and I made a caramel cashew cheesecake and a chocolate cherry cheesecake, with cherries actually baked in between layers of cheesecake. Tomorrow it will be time to make my electric roaster full of lentil soup, prepare the cabin for Pierce's overnight stay, and get ready for a rush of people.
It's been a lot of work. It still will be a lot of work. But it's something I enjoy. I often wonder if I could make a living doing this houseconcert thing. Would people come? Could we make any money? Right now, 100% of ticket sales go to the artist, and we lose money every time--with food, paper products, coffee, preparing for the day, etc. But the family enjoys it, and I'm always completely floored when I sit on my couch and watch these amazing musicians fill my home with their incredible sounds.
I have to sleep. I need to sleep. Do I want to sleep? Of course not. But once I get there, I'll be glad I did.
I'm so thrilled to host Pierce at The Sprouted Acorn--honored that he'd say "yes" to such a small venue when people of less stature than he have said no. Maybe it will help us get our foot in the door elsewhere. Bring some good music to this sleepy 5,000 horse town.
And the numbers will help, too. As of now, the count is at about 66 guests. Sixty-six! That's a whole lotta people milling around my kitchen, ya know? I'm really looking forward.
The cheesecakes are in various stages of done-ness. Fifteen-year-old Houdin made two--a milk chocolate oreo crust cheesecake and a turtle cheesecake, and I made a caramel cashew cheesecake and a chocolate cherry cheesecake, with cherries actually baked in between layers of cheesecake. Tomorrow it will be time to make my electric roaster full of lentil soup, prepare the cabin for Pierce's overnight stay, and get ready for a rush of people.
It's been a lot of work. It still will be a lot of work. But it's something I enjoy. I often wonder if I could make a living doing this houseconcert thing. Would people come? Could we make any money? Right now, 100% of ticket sales go to the artist, and we lose money every time--with food, paper products, coffee, preparing for the day, etc. But the family enjoys it, and I'm always completely floored when I sit on my couch and watch these amazing musicians fill my home with their incredible sounds.
I have to sleep. I need to sleep. Do I want to sleep? Of course not. But once I get there, I'll be glad I did.
labels:
houseconcerts,
music,
sprouted acorn
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