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Posts Tagged ‘positive attitudes’

A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of. (Ogden Nash)

My husband decides to have a glass of wine with dinner on Thursday evening. “Dear, where’s the wine?”

“On the table in the back. Why?”

“I don’t see anything there.”

I sigh. A bottle of wine can’t hide on a small green table against a red brick wall. There are several other items next to it, but not many. Our kitchen isn’t much bigger than the average postage stamp, so our three-season room helps to contain the overflow. It’s getting cooler as autumn continues, and Jay likes a slight chill to his wine. The porch is the perfect storage place.

“It was there yesterday.” I step outside to look. Nothing—as in a clear surface. Okay, I understand someone snatching a bottle of wine from a pleasantly cooled three-season room. But two containers of diet juice and two jugs of distilled water? That turns an everyday burglar into a kleptomaniac. Could anyone really be hooked on Splenda?

We look in all the usual places, but the items are missing. They don’t warrant a report. But they do make us wonder what the heck happened. True, on Wednesday we had nine kids playing in our backyard. Our attention was taxed. And, we did forget to lock the door to the porch after they all went home. A thief, a very peculiar thief—it seems to be our only answer.

Fortunately, my husband likes a glass of wine, but doesn’t need one. He doesn’t lose perspective. It will go on our grocery list, but the question remains: Why and how did someone steal jugs of distilled water without being noticed?

It becomes one of the mysteries of life until the next day when my schedule lightens, temporarily. While the kids were running relays, climbing trees, and jumping into piles of leaves, they were also on the porch. Could I have, in a moment of auto-pilot action, moved the items into a cooler in the corner to get them out of the way. I don’t really remember doing it. It’s a vague shadow memory, lost between, “Hey, you two get out of that tree. The branches aren’t strong enough,” And “Don’t push your sister.” Anything is possible.

No moment felt complete. One of our young visitors insisted on running out into the street. He is about two-years-old. He also talked around a pacifier. I didn’t understand a word he said. Thank God I had Jay to help me. However, we really needed a team of angels and an entire daycare service on hand. Yes, frenzy had its moments.

I open our large blue cooler, used only in the summer. There, neatly waiting, are our missing items. The klepto, or the overworked grandmother, is . . . me. Maybe there are some angels on hand after all. At least one tapped me on the shoulder before I got too far with blame that wasn’t warranted.

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What is straight? A line can be straight, or a street, but the human heart, oh, no, it’s curved like a road through mountains. (Tennessee Williams)

Two people smile at one another. One is three years old, the other ninety-two. A little girl and an older woman. The little girl, my granddaughter, blows kisses. The older woman, my mother-in-law, accepts them. A large portion of the day my mother-in-law sleeps, lost in day-long snoozes. I’ve often witnessed these in my father’s nursing home. Except this woman is in a house miles from where my family lives. Some of us have been traveling for hours to get here—through a hundred miles of construction zones, over two states.

Our little one is a good traveler. But she needs to expend pent-up energy now. Her excited voice and antics amuse her great grandmother. Ella is excellent medicine, joy in size three-toddler stretch pants.

But Great-Grandmother has been sick the past few days. What is enough company? What is wearing for both the elder and younger?

“How are you?” we adults ask.

“I’m fine,” Great-grandmother answers. “Tired.”

But then her eyes meet the spirit of three-year-old Ella, and together their hearts run across mountains the rest of us don’t see. We are mired in the duties and responsibilities of living, the middle of the journey with its endless road work and detours. They know the beginning and the end, the segments closest to God.

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Enjoy the little things, for one day you may look back and realize they were the big things. (Robert Brault)

My younger son, Steve, calls Wednesday evening with an unexpected proposal. “If you can collect all your portable phones, right now, I’ll give you two-hundred dollars.”

It doesn’t take me long to figure out the search would be useless. “Ah, you’ve got one of them, right?”

“In Ella’s diaper bag.”

Now I don’t believe in false accusation, but since our little one thinks a phone belongs in the precious treasure category, circumstantial evidence is present. Fortunately, the loss causes no real harm.

“I need to go into your part of town tomorrow anyway and drop off Grandpa’s laundry. I’ll get it then.”

After a re-charge the phone should be just fine. I am grateful for the gift of communication—and for the fact that Steve’s call comes before I searched under the bed, between couch cushions, among scattered toys, finding nothing but frustration.

Instead I find a laugh, as well as the opportunity to celebrate the day again as I look through the kids’ fresh art work, the books they enjoyed, and remember the simple moments that don’t seem like much on the surface, but are part of our common history.

However, in the future I may need to check the diaper bag  for contraband.

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What you do makes a difference, and you have to decide what kind of difference you want to make. (Jane Goodall)

Our youngest granddaughter politely coughs into her hand. Her hand is full of blue chalk, but it’s the thought that counts. I smile at her blue face and she smiles back before she goes back to filling the chalkboard with her spontaneous creation.

She pauses and hands me a piece of yellow chalk. I get a turn, too, albeit short.

Ella has spent her first overnight with us. I’m amazed at how smoothly it went. I’m even more amazed at her mommy and daddy, Sarah and Steve. They are busy talking to Steve’s daddy right now, in our living room after Sunday breakfast. Steve and Sarah have no idea what words I’m conjuring about them—about what a blessing they are.

It isn’t always easy to care for a child who not only needs physical and occupational therapy, but has medical concerns as well. (Of course Ella helps in her own way. She has the personality of at least three angels and the heart of four.) Nevertheless, it takes time—and money to be the parent of any child with exceptional needs. My son and daughter-in-law both work; then they volunteer for the Down Syndrome Association.

This past summer Steve and Sarah earned over seven-thousand dollars and placed seventh among contributors in Greater Cincinnati for the Down Syndrome Association. Of course they had help from friends and family. My assistance was minimal. I painted a few cups for a raffle. Jay and I babysat while the more organized folk prepared a huge festival.

However, it’s the simple, everyday dedication I love most about my own family, the fact that our little one has learned to cough into her hand instead of into the air, the way she waves good-bye at preschool with three-year-old independence, the fact that she is learning the alphabet with enthusiasm.

Her development is a direct reflection on her parenting, on two of the most wonderful people in the world. Ella is blessed, and so am I.

photos taken at the Buddy Walk

at Sawyer Point in Cincinnati on September 8, 2012

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What a bargain grandchildren are! I give them my loose change, and they give me a million dollars’ worth of pleasure. (Gene Perret)

Rebe (Rebecca) and I are the only persons in the playground at two in the afternoon on a Wednesday. It’s Grandma and Rebe time, those precious moments when I take our middle granddaughter out of the house so Grandpa can get her cousin Ella ready for a nap. Then, Rebe and I will pick up Kate from school.

The playground soon turns into an imaginative world.

“Come on up to the top with me, Grandma?” Rebe calls from the other side of an orange tunnel, on a metal portion of one of the play structures.

Ordinarily I wouldn’t consider it. I mean, this stuff was designed for children between the ages of five and twelve. I hesitate mentioning how many times I have been twelve. Besides, there’s no sign mentioning weight limit. However, Rebe doesn’t have anyone else to play with.

“Okay, sweetie. But if there is any hint of a creaking sound, I’m going to have to go back.”

The wide, but low tunnel between slide and steps doesn’t groan. I’m grateful that I am barely five feet tall. Perhaps a parent or two has needed to rescue a sobbing child once in awhile. Maybe the engineer had that in mind. Nevertheless, I regret a hardy lunch.

“This is kindergarten,” she announces in her official I’m-the-teacher voice, then begins mimicking the sign language posted in one corner. Good. Reality. I can follow this, even with an almost five-year-old girl as instructor. Then Rebe says she is going to sit in the old person corner of the classroom—the entrance to the slide. (The way downhill, I guess)

“In the where?” I’m lost again.

“I’m an old person now, so that’s where I go in the kindergarten room.”

“Okay.” Rule number one in let’s-pretend interaction: Accept any scene as long as it is innocuous. “How old are you, old person?”

“Ninety-nine.”

Well, at least that truly is old. I expected her to say nineteen or twelve—or something closer to my age.

I break pretend mode and ask, “When you go to kindergarten next year, can I go with you? I didn’t get to go when I was five.”

She shrugs. “Sure.”

That game ends. Perhaps I broke the spell. We go to a bench with a steering wheel attached at ground level. Rebe is now my mother. The front and back seats merge in the imaginative world—no sense mentioning inconsistencies. That would only confirm my lack of pretending experience.

“Can I drive, Mommy?” I ask.

“No, Mommy has to do it.”

“Because it is dangerous for kids to drive?”

“Yes,” she says with mock certainty.

But I have brought too much adult truth into play. “Why is it dangerous for kids to drive?” she asks later as we leave to get her older sister.

“Because kids don’t know how to do it yet.”

But that doesn’t mean you aren’t someone now, I think. That what you know, decides much of anything. Sometimes simply being is enough. I notice that the tightness in the back of my neck from weeks of stress, has relaxed.

“I love you, Grandma.”

“I love you, too.”

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Let’s stop “tolerating” or “accepting” difference, as if we’re so much better for not being different in the first place. Instead, let’s celebrate difference, because in this world it takes a lot of guts to be different. (Kate Bornstein)

Ted Kremer won a day as bat boy for the Cincinnati Reds. The story appeared as front page news on Sunday, September 16,  By many folks’ standards, Ted, also known as Teddy, is different. He was born with a tripled twenty-first chromosome: Down syndrome. The full article is worth the time.

 http://cin.ci/PGyzar by John Erardi

This story has been posted and re-posted more than any other on Facebook, and it makes me smile. In fact, I shared it, too. There are enough stories about fraud, murder, and messy politics to pollute the press.

During the game, Ted (Teddy) got excited a tad prematurely. This exchange was taken directly from the article:

We wait until we get three outs before we count this one as a win,” said Votto, gently.

Teddy took the hint and waited for the final out.

And what did Votto tell you then, Teddy?

“He said, ‘I love you, Ted. Thank you for everything.’

It’s an upbeat attitude like Ted’s that makes this world bearable.

I know. I have a three-year-old girl in my life with an extra chromosome that somehow blocks out negative thinking. Ella has sunshine-white hair, and I have often wondered if it isn’t part halo. Oh, she has her human side, too. She knows how to test limits, and loves to throw any object—ball or not. It is not wise to leave eyeglasses within her reach. However, she doesn’t seem to learn trouble-making as quickly as she does love.

Last Wednesday when we had all three of our grandchildren at our house, I was on the phone with Ella’s daddy when I heard some minor fuss between her two older cousins. They were fighting over who got to play with Ella. I doubt she enjoyed being an object in the fight, but I’m sure she realized she was wanted.  She knew she was loved, just as Ted understood it.

Folk like Ted and Ella, who have to work harder to walk, talk, and learn the alphabet take the straight path to the important. Ego doesn’t get in the way.

It makes me want to alter the description special needs, to simply special.

photo from Circle-21

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