The Power of the Arts

Simeon is in a play this weekend. It is “The Seussification of Romeo and Juliet.” Yes, just imagine that Dr. Seuss and Shakespeare got together for a few drinks and decided to collaborate! Simeon is Romeo and one of his best friends plays Juliet (“No, I’m not kissing Margaret!”) At any rate, it promises to be fun and I’m looking forward to attending. My son has had many challenges in school, but I love what happens when he moves into the theater. He has an amazing memory and can master the lines with ease. He has a wonderful sense of physicality and a great ear for tone and music. He is in his element on stage and the success he finds there bolsters him.

I work in the early childhood education business. Yesterday the owner of the company was “fit to be tied” because she’d read an article that said that many of the schools in our district were cutting out the music and art programs. These were the same schools that were putting ‘smart boards’ into the PreK classrooms at $8000 a pop. I understand that computer technology is important. I understand that there are a zillion learning programs that can be downloaded. But studies prove that a little person’s curiosity and ability to solve problems develops naturally through exposure to music and the arts and good old fashioned play.

I know this is true for my kids. The act of creativity IS the act of problem solving. A mind that can memorize the lines of a play or learn the fingering for a guitar or can understand the tones in a scale, can also figure out the dimensions of a building, or how to develop an interactive accounting program or how to motivate a classroom. Or how to take some new idea and make it into a reality. Am I sounding passionate here? I am.

My Baby Girl

My baby girl turned 20 Sunday. Twenty years and 3 days ago, after laboring for hours in Ziggy’s motel, Sara entered our lives and made the whole world a different place. Ziggy’s motel was not the plan. Well, a lot of stuff wasn’t in the plan. I wanted my child to be brought into the world gently by a midwife. Ron and I were believers in traditional things and what, we thought, could be more traditional than a gently lit birthing center, a loving midwife, Ron singing as our child entered the world and me immediately bouncing back to a size 6 with a 26 inch waist. Yeah, that last part should have been a clue. Suffice to say — the best laid plans of mice, men, and idealistic pregnant people, oft-times go awry.

First there was the hurricane. Hurricane Hugo hit the South Carolina coast with a vengeance and we all, me 8 1/2 months pregnant, had to evacuate. While we were blest to return to a home still standing and a neighborhood with minimal damage, many weren’t so lucky and thousands were displaced. Then there was the labor that would not proceed. Though we rushed the 45 minutes to the birthing center as soon as the water broke, our baby stubbornly decided to hold on and labor trickled to a stand still.

And then — there was Ziggy’s. We didn’t want it to be Ziggy’s. The midwife told us to go to a nearby hotel so that we’d be close when labor started up again. But all the hotels and motels in the little town of Bamberg as well as neighboring ‘bergs’ were filled with displaced Hugo survivors. Ron and I wandered from place to place like characters in a nativity play, with Ron pleading over and over — “but my wife is pregnant and in labor!” But in the end, only Ziggy’s was available. It was available because nobody with ANY option would stay there. We wrapped ourselves up in our own stuff on top of the bed with the suspicious linens and counted contractions. The crickets and other critters rustling about the room on tiny dry little legs kept us unwelcome company. When daylight came and we’d returned to the birthing center it was determined that Sara was firmly butt first and someone would have to go in and get her.

So, finally, there was the emergency C-Section and my tiny 5 1/2 pound baby girl entered the world, looking around immediately with her bright, shiny eyes. I fell immediately irrevocably in love. And I still am. As I sat with my baby girl this past Sunday I was filled with so much pride at the woman she has become and tremendous faith in the woman she is becoming. I’d go to Ziggy’s for her again.

Kanye West, Joe Wilson and Kindergarten

Joe Wilson’s and Kanye West’s recent outbursts make me think of the things I learned in Kindergarten.  I know it was a long time ago, but I don’t think the curriculum has changed that much.  My own children attended much more recently.  Even though Ron and I read and sang and talked to our children from the time they were little fetusus (No — I’m not kidding. We did!), when they each reached school age we tearfully (okay – that was just me) enrolled them in one of the local schools.  They seemed so small during those first days,  but we felt it was a good experience.  They were going to have the opportunity to learn some more important stuff — like how symbols come together to form meaning, and how some things are alike and some different.  And they began to learn how to get along with other children who might be different than them.

Kindergarten reinforced some of the lessons we taught at home. They learned that just because someone doesn’t agree with you doesn’t make them your enemy.  That it’s not polite to interrupt others when they are speaking. That even if you don’t like what someone else does it is not okay to hit them or call them names or throw blocks at them.  If little Johnny is playing with all the puzzles and you don’t think it’s fair, you should still try to work it out or find someone  who can help.  These were good lessons.  And while Sara and Simeon eventually learned to read and count and even speak Spanish and a little Japanese, I think it was those earliest lessons that may best serve them as they move into adulthood.

Maybe some of the adults I see on television never went to Kindergarten.  Too bad. I know a few well educated five year olds who could teach them a thing or two.

(The chair is entitled “Scream My Head Off.” I finished this piece in 2004.)

Play Time

School was out this past Friday. My son is so happy. The summer stretches out before him and he sees a driver’s license, the beach, lots of basketball, cook-outs and girls who think he’s cute. I see that it’s time for him to get a job. Play time, at least unlimited play time, is over.

Actually, that sounds gloomier than I intend. I believe in play. I love play. I try to play as much as I can, as a matter of fact. I don’t think we ever outgrow it. I strongly believe that the ability to be creative and the ability to be playful are closely related. That’s one reason that I’ve started doing “Playshops” at schools, conferences and education centers around the country. For so many little children the pressure to succeed in academics is pushing away the opportunity for creative play. Kids learn through play. For that matter, adults learn through play too! For children, just being allowed to interact in their environment and satisfy their natural curiousity is a learning opportunity. For adults, just letting go of expectations and allowing ourselves to experience places, materials and others is also a learning experience.

Okay, I’m getting a little lectur-y here. Didn’t mean too. It’s just that I’ve met so many grown ups who’ve forgotten how to paint with their fingers, or wear a bright pattern or try something new. Little people do that naturally.

So, okay Simeon, I do want you to play this summer. Meet new girls, get sand in your shoes, laugh ’till you cry and drive SAFELY AND WITH A SEAT BELT. But get a job, too, okay?

About the pics:  The adults playing are at a Head Start Play-Shop in May. The other pic is Sim and his friend and “Play Sis” Jessica before the prom.

Here I Am!

Emerge

Emerge

This past month has been a bit overwhelming. While I was preparing for my father’s death, I was not prepared. Loss feels like swimming at the bottom of heavy water. But each day I feel more of myself emerging, rising to the surface.

I spent the past week in Orlando, Florida where I presented teacher training at the National Head Start conference. That was great! I love folk who love kids! We explored the ways that children (and grown ups) learn through playing. My idea of fun! So, I’m back. My days are starting to take shape again and I’ll be back to blogging! Simeon started driving classes this week. He thinks this means he’ll have free access to the car this summer. I don’t think so…..

The painting, “Emerge” is from a gallery show I had with other artists at ArtWorks.  It’s the 3rd in a series.  This is the piece I sold!

A Mama’s Gotta Do What A Mama’s Gotta Do

It’s really dark at 5:00 a.m.  I  tie up my sneakers, stick my ear buds in my ears and head out anyway.  I need to get to the gym, work out and get back home by 6:00 a.m. to make sure my son gets up in time for school.

I used to go to exercise after he was dropped off, but things have changed.  My son  sat down next to me one night last week and told me he was in over his head in his school work, uncomfortable with the kids he’d started hanging out with and feeling like he wasn’t himself.  He was worried.  I was worried.  I guess my biggest worry is that I hadn’t realized how much he was floundering.  It was so easy to accept his one word answer to almost every query — “straight.”  But things aren’t straight.  And Sim at almost 16, realized he wasn’t able to get it straight by himself.

I like to think I know what’s going on.  But I didn’t. My daughter Sara always said I knew everything everyone was doing. It was like a had my own spy network.  But when Sara and Sabrina were in High School I was working from my home office and almost always around.  Lately I had so much going on with work and my extended family and my own pursuits that I wasn’t really paying attention.

But the reality is this — when some child gets in major trouble the media and community never ask, “Where was his teacher?”  “Where was his principal?”  “Where was his coach?”  No, the question almost always is “Where was his mother?  Why didn’t she know?”  And, on many levels, that’s the right question.  I’m not saying that everything our children do is our fault or that children make mistakes or struggle because we aren’t doing our job.  That’s not true.  Or even fair.  But I am saying that it is my job to do everything I can to be aware.  To do everything I can to help my child learn to make right choices and to learn how to accept the consequences of  and turn around poor choices.  It’s a parent’s job to advocate for their child.

So, I set my alarm for 4:45 a.m.  ‘Cause after all, I’ve got to take care of myself if I’m going to take care of anybody else, and I get back home in time to sit and eat breakfast with my son and take him to school before going to work.  My  earlier hours at work mean that I get home shortly after Sim does and we go over his work together.  It’s not easy.  Sim resists sometimes.  He’s going to be 16 in a few weeks, after all, and all this togetherness is starting to feel like a bit much.  Sometimes, as I struggle to remember geometry from 1977, or take a walk in the early morning dark, it feels like  a bit much for me too.  But I count my blessings and I thank God that, in a moment of clarity and vulnerability, my son came to me.  He’s going to be a good man.  And his father and I are going to do everything we can to help him get there.  After all, a mama’s gotta do what a mama’s gotta do.

Daddy’s Little Girl

My father doesn’t have words any more.  He seldom if ever speaks.  We can’t tell if he really knows we’re there.  Last Sunday Reggie and Sharon (my brother and sister-in-law) drove up from Florida and we went to the Nursing Home where my father has been living for the past 6 weeks.  Gloria, my step mother, came too and Ron and my son Simeon.  Daddy never said a word.  He didn’t look up from the sunlight he was trying to catch on his left pant leg.  We rolled him out onto the large front porch into the pre-spring air.  Simeon kept looking away.  His eyes were wet.

When Simeon was little he thought Papa was the biggest and strongest man in the whole world.  He even brought him to kindergarten for show and tell once.  It was like bringing his own superhero.  Papa was my superhero, too.  When I was a child I thought he was perfect.  Actually, I thought he was perfect up into my early  20’s.  Hero worship dies hard.  But even when he ceased to be perfect he still was my comfort and support.  The man who believed I could do or be anything.  The parent who took the time to listen.  He used to bake bread and german chocolate cakes and on Friday’s would introduce us to something new for dinner.  Even when we married and started our own homes, he would always find something to fix for us, from a running toilet to our taxes, when he came to visit.

But now he sits slumped in a chair, his eyes turned inward to something we can’t see.  We talked at him.  And finally we decided to sing.  My Daddy was very dedicated to the church.  My mother used to say he was there whenever the doors opened.  I don’t know about that, but we did spend a lot of time there.  And we sang alot.  As a matter of fact, I learned to sing harmony listening to my Daddy.  The first line I learned was the bass line.  So we started to sing old hymns and after a while his mouth began to move and, very faintly, he began to sing with us.  Encouraged we sang hymn after hymn.  We stopped for a moment to chat among ourselves.  And then we heard, from his chair, a clear soft baritone singing the chorus of  “Shall we gather at the river,” a song we’d sung a few minutes before.  My daddy singing.  We immediately joined in and sang another voice.  But soon he fell quiet and it was just us.  He didn’t make another sound for the rest of our visit.  It’s hard to sing when I want to cry.  The notes aren’t so clear.  Plus I was trying to be tough for my family.  Maybe they were too.

We took Daddy back to his room.  My brother and Gloria got him in to bed.   There was a man across the hall who kept calling for help.  We knew him back when he owned a store downtown.  Simeon was worried about him and went into his room to see if he could do anything.  He couldn’t really.  The man thought he was in his store and wanted something from a shelf that wasn’t there.  But Simeon stayed and talked to him for a minute and that seemed to help.

I am Simeon and Sara’s mom.  I’m Sabrina’s Momz (her term for me), and there are other children who call me by that name.  But this morning, as I sit thinking of my father, I am really just my Daddy’s little girl.

Spring Rant — and the Mom Song

I’ve been at the beach.  It’s been wonderful!  Last week we had the heat on and this weekend Spring is here.  Spring ahead indeed!  I didn’t even mind the darkness when the alarm went off at 5:00 a.m.  Okay — I minded a little, but after waking Simeon up (it took 4 tries.  He is not a morning person) and dropping him off at school, I took a walk on the beach and everything was better.  It felt so good that I went back after work.  (Don’t hate me because I live on the coast…)

The breeze was great.  Kids were playing with dogs, folk were digging in the sand and looking for sharks teeth along the water’s edge.  I had my beach chair and a book.  Pretty cool — except for the guys  playing really loud music from their car radio.  Music that was so much NOT what I wanted to hear.  The parents of those cute kids with the wild little Benji dog  didn’t seem to want to hear it either.   There are names I do not want to be called and I don’t care who’s doing the calling.  And there are words I’d just as soon my children, or anybody elses’ for that matter, not identify themselves with.  (The only female dog in our household had 4 legs and fur.)  Okay — I’m starting to rant.  I’ll stop now.  So I came home.  Opened my windows and enjoyed the breeze.  I’ve got a scented candle burning and an unread magazine to flip through.  (It’s a couple of months old, but I get to them when I can!)  I’ll go back tomorrow morning.  The beach is way quieter before 8:00 a.m.

Speaking of music and ranting, a friend sent this GREAT video clip.  I LOVE this.

Which Hat am I Wearing?

While my son is at the Y playing basketball, I’m trying to figure out which hat I’ve got on.  You know, out of the closet full of hats I’ve got: designer (I do design work for a company that creates and sells items for preschoolers), Mom (well he’s at the Y and Sara’s away in college, so I can set that hat on the back of my head for a few minutes), wife (okay, Ron’s out of town), writer — blogging counts.  Also performer, speaker, artist, daughter, friend.  My friend hat may have been slipping lately.  I may have lost one along the way due to all the hat switching.

When you’ve only got one head (and that’s all I’ve seen in the mirror) you have to make choices.  Mostly my friends understand.  My parents have been patient.  My employer doesn’t want to hear about it.  I pick and choose.  Lay some things aside,  pick others up.  But my Mom hat, though occasionally pushed back from my forehead, is never hung up.  No matter what else I am, I’m always Mom.  Even if it’s long distance with my girls or with one ear tuned to hear my son’s key in the door.

The pictures at the top are some of my functional art pieces  (Yeah, every now and then I get in the studio to create.)  The first one, “6 impossible things before breakfast” is a mirror I made after reading this fun quote from “Alice in Wonderland”

I can’t believe that!” said Alice.
“Can’t you?” the Queen said in a pitying tone. “Try again: draw a long breath, and shut your eyes.”
Alice laughed. “There’s no use trying,” she said: “one can’t believe impossible things.”
“I daresay you haven’t had much practice,” said the Queen. “When I was your age, I always did it for half-an-hour a day. Why, sometimes I’ve believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast.”

The chair in the second picture is the first in a series of 4.  I call it “goddess I, the mother”  It’s one of my favorites.

Fast Food and Good Intentions

He really likes pasta in white sauce.  It’s his favorite dish that I make.  But I stayed at the office later than I’d planned and didn’t get to the supermarket until after 7 p.m.  And I needed to go by and help my mother-in-law with her meds.  (She’s a very sharp 95, but all those pills with that tiny little print get to be a bit much.)  And by the time I got home Simeon had already left with friends to watch a basketball game at a nearby high school and I was exhausted.  The groceries are still sitting on the kitchen counter.  I ate take-out chicken.  I had planned to cook dinner with my son and to talk about what was happening in school.  We were going to make a plan for the rest of the semester.  It seemed like a great plan, but it didn’t happen.  The whole week has been like that.  My little brother Rod and his girlfriend came to town, I worked late several nights.  My son had basketball, drama and dance practice.   We  passed each other in the night.   I wish it were as easy as it is on TV.