Thursday, February 26, 2009

My darling, you look wonderful tonight!






A special thanks to my sister-in-law, Michelle, for capturing these fantastic photos of Mary all gussied up for a spectacular evening out involving Old Country Buffet and a little Bingo, perhaps, or maybe a piano bar downtown. I can't stop looking at them.

little boxes all the same

These little cookie cutter neighborhoods have been sprouting up all over this place - looking eerily like the subdivisions devouring rapidly the diminishing open spaces between our town and the shopping center we frequent the next city over. A week ago, I found THIS printable worksheet and its been, More, mommy, please! More houses! ever since. Mary just likes to cut them out. Priscilla and Ben find textured surfaces, like our antique furnace covers and heavily plastered walls, that make interesting patterns when paper is laid over them and rubbed with a crayon. I like these homemade ones better because at least they vary in color and I can gather them in a pile to put away and bring back out whenever the children and I feel like it. They aren't rooted by concrete to our fields and farm land, encouraging our addiction to excess with their insane amount of square footage, cathedral ceilings and three car garages. They can't bury us in debt, can't separate so severely the haves from have nots. I appreciate their accessibility, and heart windows.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

lola










So, see if you can guess which of my children are thrilled that we are dogsitting their cousins' puppy, Lola, and which one thinks that a four pound, sweet-faced, silent little monster has invaded our home with the malicious intent of licking all of her barbie dolls.

it's time to get together for the Sabourin show tonight



If someone were to say to me, So describe a typical evening in the Sabourin home, I would show to him or her the above video and simply reply, Well, there you have it. To most, I would guess, this two minute clip might seem pretty uneventful but to me its like capturing a significant era and my children's characteristics in a bottle. They won't always be content to sing over and over again every 7th word to a Disney ballad while prancing around, turning in circles, on our rug . In fact, as you can tell, Elijah, now ten years old, is nowhere to be seen. He created this repetitive form of amusement when we still lived in Chicago and passed it down to his younger siblings but presently prefers to spend hours in his room with legos, a drawing pad, and more recently, J.R.R Tolkien.


You will notice that, as usual, my niece, Jane, is over and that she and Mary are wearing Princess dresses much too big for them. That is their main shared activity, whether here or at my brother's house - playing dress-up and then making us watch them "do a show," a show believe it or not we never get tired of gaping at because those are our tiny girls and their every move thrills us. This is also a perfect example of Benji's exuberance for life, for music, for body humor, which he consistently maintains (much to my joy, chagrin and fascination) in all situations he encounters. Priscilla, no longer content to spin idly like the little ones, is off in the corner, memorizing the lyrics she will later perform with the utmost seriousness to a crowd of thousands gazing at her attentively from our couch, which is really an auditorium. And I will let her have that moment (much to the disgruntlement of Ben and Mary) all alone on the "stage." She, too, is growing up and needing time to herself - snippets of uninterrupted time to explore, under my watchful and yet, hopefully, non-intrusive, not over controlling eye, her own likes and dislikes, her dawning passions and ambitions.


I want to remember these days with clarity - their breezy unselfconsciousness, the sound of my happy and carefree kids being just kids, the nights of free and live entertainment I will ache for when they are older and desperate to fly from this nest. I want to more fully grasp and and be thankful for the fact that, for now, my "typical" is exceptionally transparent, extraordinarily rewarding, remarkably fleeting. I want a front row seat to this craziness as long as possible.

Sunday, February 22, 2009

we'll leave the light on

















It was a bit more hectic than it used to be, when we'd plug in the baby monitor in Elijah and Priscilla's room and walk upstairs from our half of the two-flat we co-owned in Chicago to yours to watch a movie, eat enchiladas. We've been busy multiplying- busy settling in. We're separated now by a couple hundred miles, less apt to stay awake past 10:00 pm. My kids were staring anxiously out the window for an hour before your arrival. To them, to Troy and I, you're family.

From Friday to Sunday, we made meals, cleaned up meals, laughed and marveled at the children. Every room of our old house was filled with life, with action, every dish we owned dirtied, every memory recalled even as new memories formed. It was a bit more hectic, more fun, more meaningful. It was awesome of you to pack up your stuff, pile in your van, and make the effort to come and see us, just because.

I always feel melancholy right after you leave. It quiets down and makes your absence from our every day lives that much more obvious. We will play phone tag several times a week, leaving long and rambling messages, but it's not the same - not the same as watching Benjamin and Thomas playing Battleship, talking intently over coffee, delighting in Russell and Elliot learning new words, new signs, pretending their hands have been chopped off by Darth Vader's light saber, hearing Jared and Priscilla sing a Beauty and the Beast themed duet.

I don't care how many more little ones we add to the mix; I don't care how loud or how messy it gets; I don't care what time of the year, what time of day or night it is, you are always welcome, always, always wanted; we'll leave the light on.

Friday, February 20, 2009

here I am, here I am


You've been sleeping awfully hard lately, dosing off before your younger sister, Mary, in the bed below you has ceased with the, "Mom! I'm thirsty! and I forgot how to close my eyes!" routine she been practicing with an annoying degree of diligence. You're exhausted, I think, from being so big and yet so little simultaneously.

I am always taken aback by your random bouts of shyness - when you bite your lower lip, stare down at your toes, cling to my waist. No baby talk, I whisper, discreetly in your ear, until eventually you pull away from me, straighten your posture.

I'm so busy with the boys, the rough and tumble, distracted boys and tiny Mary, still quick and unpredictable. I count on you to be your old dependable self, eager to please, easy to manage and I thus I come down too hard when you compromise that reliability by wandering instead into episodes of poutiness or silliness or even rarer, straight-up defiance. I forget sometimes to take into account that you're imperfect, like I am imperfect and just as prone to lose myself, my patience, my confidence, in the moment.

This morning I got you dressed for a special day downtown with daddy. You picked out your new red shirt and sweater, your gold shoes. We had to hurry because the train was leaving in thirty minutes. We had to hurry so I pulled your hair when I brushed it, and then you barked at me. Don't speak to me like that, I growled, imitating exactly the tone I had just forbidden. We humphed at each other until your coat was finally on and I came to my senses. Have a good time, sweetheart, I offered warmly, and you instantly brightened.

It is my job to be the mom - calm, stable, consistent. You, Priscilla, are but a child awakening to a world not always fair or kind or safe. I can't guarantee much, but I promise you this - I will never stop trying, stop forgiving, stop apologizing. I know you need me, the pray without ceasing me …

Here I am, here I am.

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Indiana Awesome

When any of their grandsons turn ten, Troy's parents (A.K.A Papa and Nana) take them to the Lego store and let them pick out something especially grand. For months, Elijah has been talking about it, dreaming about it, deciding what to get and then changing his mind. This past weekend, his time to shop for that perfect Lego something had finally arrived. When we picked him up, he was beaming. In one hand was a gigantic Lego bag and in the other, a much smaller one from McDonalds.

He chose Indiana Jones and the Temple of the Crystal Skull. Since Monday night, he has been busy piecing together an impressively realistic, adventure fraught, play scene complete with trap doors and evil enemies half the size of my thumb. It is cool - so cool, in fact, Elijah declared it an even better gift then the Nintendo DS (the one he keeps desperately begging for and we keep not buying him because, first of all, its too expensive and him owning it would mean he'd never make eye contact with us again) would have been.

In an effort to save his birthday treasure from the same tragic fate of so many other toys and games we've broken and scattered, Priscilla, Ben and Mary have been forbidden to touch and/or breath on any of the Lego blocks that comprise this specific set. The girls, for the most part, are fine with this but Benji, oh boy, he is struggling. It was just my fingernail!, he yelled this afternoon when Elijah accused him of breaking the Sabourin commandment by brushing his pinky against the whip in Indiana's c-shaped hand, I didn't even feel it!

Hold on buddy! Only four years from now, it will be your turn!

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Chesterton Literary Society







It's getting busier and busier all the time around here, which explains why I haven't posted and why just looking at our calendar makes me reach for the extra-strength Tylenol. It's a good hectic, though - full of visits from friends, birthday parties, dance classes and...yes, as you can see from the above photos, enlightening evenings spent sipping wine and eating cheesecake while discussing the plots and characters within a variety of fine books.

We Hoosiers have corn, the Dunes, the Indianapolis 500 and now, I am pleased to announce, the Chesterton Literary Society (pretty fancy, uh?). For months I'd wanted to organize some sort of book club and, finally, we have gathered and committed to meet again to discuss our next novel in mid-March. This past Friday, we focused on Jane Austin's Northanger Abbey. It was such a pleasant night - exactly what I'd hoped for. As a stay-at-home mother, I find it absolutely delightful to not only leave my house and children behind for a few hours but to also nurture my mind with great stories and conversation. If you ever find yourself in our neck of the woods on the second Friday of any given month, feel free to join us!

Friday, February 13, 2009

read us any rule we'll break it


I like to call these two Laverne and Shirley. My Mary and her cousin, Jane, could not look more opposite. They bicker, dream up hair-brained ideas, and are fiercely loyal to one another. It makes my sister-in-law, Paige, and I laugh to watch them interact. It's like my husband, Troy, and my brother, Bobby, have gone back in time and become inseparable little girls. It is weird as a parent to see your spouse's features on the face of your child - weird and completely endearing.

On another note, we are leaving in the morning to spend a long weekend at my in-laws. I am so looking forward to it. Papa and Nana (I know you are reading this and thank you for that), break out the cereal and ice cream! :)

Thursday, February 12, 2009

all I want is you to be my sweet honey bee...



Ahh, love is in the air! I know this because all morning long, Priscilla and I have been frantically creating thirty some valentines to hand out this afternoon at our homeschool co-op Valentine's Day party. I am really so above this holiday. You've heard the argument, right? That it's become heavily marketed. That it's only real purpose is to make tons of money for
Dear sweet, kind and generous husbands everywhere (mine included) who may need a bit of help reading between the lines,
Hallmark and Russell Stover, Whitman's, Fanny May. I mean, c'mon, it's pretty silly, paying
This weekend, your significant other is hoping with all her heart that you will shower her with words filled to overflowing with sweetness.
four dollars for a sappy card and twenty dollars more for flowers, flowers that wilt and die.
She is expecting at the very least an actual card (which is different mind you than an, "I love you, babe," scrawled in pen on a piece of notebook paper).
I'll tell you what we don't have and that is any extra cash for romantic frivolities.
If you also arranged for a babysitter to come over so you could take her out to dinner, that would pretty much make you
I am very secure in Troy's commitment to our marriage.
a super hero in her eyes - one able to refresh and refuel his weary spouse in a single bound. This day only comes once a year so try not to
I know deep down how much he appreciates me...and that is enough.
blow it. Much love, your adoring wives.

But for all of you into that kind of thing,

I hope you have a very Happy Valentine's Day!

Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Paper Airplane (I wish I could stay out of his way but that's much too hard for me)


Can I go around the block by myself, mom?

Well, last year you couldn't because you were five and terrified of dogs, even tiny ones. Because you not only talked to strangers, but chased them down to say, hello, or ask why they were bald or old or just different in general from you, so small and curious. But yesterday, emboldened by unseasonably warm weather, you asked again. A friend invited you over, a friend who usually just calls for Elijah but, oh the joy, he included you as well in an invitation to act out scenes from Star Wars in his front yard, one street behind us. I could feel the desperation exuding from your eyes, your very skin. But would you break down in frustration if they, the older boys, played roughly or changed the rules mid-game? You're still a ball of energy and impulses. This year, nonetheless, it feels unnatural, unwise, to deny you a taste of independence. Because you, my middle child, my youngest son, will not be held back. By restraining you, I would lose you in the end. You are exactly, in this way, like your father was at your age- discontent to sit at home. I predict that you, too, will make your parents very proud, very proud and incredibly nervous. You will test my faith and remind me why a life shrouded in fear and apprehension is a life half-lived. You are my opposite. You are precisely what I needed.

Yes, Ben, you may go.

Please be careful.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

let's be together and weather the weather


"Why is it summer here?" asks Mary, pointing to patches of naked grass, "and winter there?" There being the other half of our yard still covered with snow. I am sure there are all kinds of eerie explanations as to why, in Indiana, in the middle of February, it is 63 degrees outside but I am much too busy soaking in the sun and inhaling the mild air to dwell on them just at the moment. Here comes Elijah pulling his sister in the wagon. I hear the swing set squeaking, my children singing at the top of their lungs. It won't last, I know but, s-h-h-h, let's please not spoil it. Today, this afternoon, I'm less overwhelmed, more optimistic. And fancy that - nothing's changed but the weather.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Announcement



For a long while, I couldn’t quite put my finger on it. It wasn’t the exhaustion or sudden loss of freedom per se; I was sure that eventually time and experience would remedy (or at least numb) the ill effects of those violent intrusions on my health and emotions. When the claustrophobia and hormonally charged periods of baby blueness came and went and came again those first several months, I knew deep down in my gut that they were not the cause, not the root anyway, of my discontentment either. I wanted to be a mom. I was committed wholeheartedly to this invaluable opportunity to raise and nurture my children. No matter how hard I tried, however, to line up my thought life with my set in stone convictions regarding the sacredness of parenthood, I couldn’t make one consistently reflect the other. In my mind, bouts of resentment, impatience, and insecurity were obviously signs of failure – were simply incompatible with good and prayerful parenting. What was dampening my experience as a mother (aha! I finally figured it out!) was that impossibly wide chasm between my ideals and capabilities. My main objective in life, then, became to cross it.

To combat my incompetence I sought voraciously the advice of others. I positive disciplined, sleep trained and chore charted my way to success – success that would last a week or so before I’d lose steam and give up, and then agonize over my laziness? my selfishness? my flightiness? To be honest, I didn’t know what exactly was wrong with me! Somewhere there was a key that could unlock that mystical secret of maternal satisfaction and until I found it, I would dart all over the place testing theories and hypotheses claiming posession of precisely what I was longing for. Out there lay my happiness, perfection and fulfillment. I was always but an article or surefire tip away from arriving at that mommy plateau from which everything runs smoothly and where everyone, parents and kids alike, respond pleasantly and appropriately from that point forward to life’s challenges.

In the midst of a never ending voyage toward an ambiguous and elusive finish line, I began to open up, out of frustration, to my fellow mom friends. What I discovered repeatedly, surprisingly enough, was that each of us was struggling with our own unique self-doubts. Each of us was worn out from trying to live up to our impeccable standards. Each of us was concerned that our children were abnormally something – shy, aggressive, willful, behind in development, you name it. It also began to dawn on me, however, that those conversations so honest and yet seemingly unproductive in which I vented to a supportive and empathetic peer provided comfort unlike any how-to manual I had ever combed through for answers. Feeling part of something bigger than the little lonely world I was dwelling in and worrying in and yet would sacrifice anything to stay in, brought me real and sustained peace. In apartments, houses and condos around the globe were women and men just like me – parents who adored their kids, parents whose families were flawed, parents inching their way toward enlightenment two steps forward and one step backward at a time.

Several years ago I got an idea in my head. I wanted to chronicle my experience as a new mom coming to terms with the actualities of her role. I wanted to state clearly and candidly the misconceptions holding me back from taking ownership of my position as the mother of these distinct children placed divinely in my care. I desired to scream from the pages of a book not, “Here is how you do it!” but rather, “You, my friend, are not alone!” I am abundantly thankful for Conciliar Press and for their willingness to take a chance on me. With Conciliar, I was able to freely and thoroughly examine motherhood in light of the Orthodox Christianity I had converted to. It was rigorous work, writing with four small children on my lap and at my feet, staying up later than I should to finish just one more thought, one more paragraph. It was (and still is) scary, I’ll admit it, to become so vulnerable through the sharing of my faults and fears. But bigger than the challenges were the revelations! I was floored to find out how applicable and transforming are the teachings of the ancient Church to modern day men and women in the throes of disciplining, praying for, and doting on their children.

It is finished; I can scarcely believe it! Close to Home: One Orthodox Mother’s Quest for Patience, Peace and Perseverance is now available to pre-order at Conciliar’s website. I am honored for this chance to reveal how my numerous mistakes and disappointments, a sense of community, and the teachings of Jesus as revealed through the mysteries of His Church, are enabling me to focus less on what I can’t be or do and more on what God can. I want to take this opportunity to thank you, all of you who have listened to these podcasts and read my blogs and who have inspired me to wake up each morning and try all over again to be a little more like Christ than the day before. Let us continue pursuing the unearthly gratification that comes from serving one another, uplifting one another – from loving sacrificially in the name of the Holy Trinity our spouses, sons and daughters, siblings, parents and neighbors.

Saturday, February 7, 2009

hey hey pretty baby

feasting on petit fours


Isabelle and Elia

Mary Catherine

yum


the lovely Miss Kris

a fancified Paige

my Priscilla


GLITTER!

dancing

angels

the one and only Josie

What, I ask you, is more adorable than a roomful of sweet little girls (and one just as sweet spider man) celebrating fanciness and glitter and ice cream? Thank you to Paige, Isabelle and Janie for inviting us to your Fancy Nancy party! We had a splendid time.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Reflecting Light

We fought all the way to the library. We fought off tears and the urge to run away from one another. It's too much sometimes, having to love and raise and educate my children. I'm not always up to it. To tell you the truth, I lose momentum, cave into frustration, run out of steam. As usual, I was bundled, but I neglected to put on boots. Through my silvery flats and black stripy knee socks I felt the slush, dirty slush. Well that figures, I thought, like Eeyore counting his mishaps, on top of everything else, my feet are wet. Oh bother.

Once inside, the five of us scattered. In separate aisles, separate spaces, we unwound. I watched toddlers running loose - heard screams of protest, whispered warnings; all around me were mothers in the messy, demanding, thick of it. I was comforted, in good company, not alone. Check this out, said Elijah, my nine-year-old. And together we marveled at a picture of hands painted expertly to resemble zebras, alligators, lions - spectacular stuff- in a kid's magazine. That is amazing, I assured him, relieved and grateful for the olive branch he was extending to me, having cooled off and forgotten entirely how unfair, how intolerable is his life as an eldest son.

The moment passed, as it usually does. Our despair gave way to acceptance, warm and manageable, with but a simple change of scenery. We weren't broken it turns out, only shaded for awhile from the goldenness of our potential. We lost sight of what is good, even holy, about being bonded, fused together, for all eternity. We forget and then remember and then forget again all the time. So it goes with faith and sacrifice: up and down, mountains and valleys, joy and sorrow.

It isn't less cold than before but the sun is bright, brilliant. The icicles (or "sharps," as Mary prefers to call them), so jagged and intimidating, protruding downward over our porch have begun melting. Seen this way, transparent and dazzling, reflecting the light, winter seems pure and clean and promising.

Harsh, healing, hectic, invigorating, binding, freeing - it's all just a matter of perspective.

Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Cedarwell

Photo by Austin Warnock-Indianapolis Indiana austinwarnock.wordpress.com

Recently, Troy's cousin, Erik, stopped by to see us on his way to Chicago. Erik is a musician. His band is Cedarwell. Eleven years ago, when Troy and I got married, Erik was just a kid and it’s been remarkable watching him really come into his own as an artist. I've wanted to play some of his songs, here, on my blog and just yesterday (finally) discovered this one, Black Lung, on Playlist. It's one of my favorites.

Last Thanksgiving, Erik recorded Black Lung at his uncle's lovely home in Battle Creek, Michigan. Troy's family knocks me out in that they are all unusually talented and supportive of one another, which is why Erik included them, his aunt Bev and several cousins, in the process of creating something so beautiful from out of nothing. It was late in the evening when I sat silently, so as not to disturb the rhythm of a lyricist giving birth, between my two sisters-in-law and watched on with fascination as various relatives played the violin, the flute, the piano in accompaniment to Erik and his back-up singers (also relatives - my husband, Troy, among them). It made me marvel at the miracle of music - how it reaches it out and grabs you by the soul.

Erik is out there making a go of it, sacrificing much to share with thousands of fortunate listeners, both here and abroad, his time, his passion and his talents. It is a privilege, now, for me to share with you something rare and refreshing – melodies thought-provoking, raw, unpretentious, unpredictable and sometimes haunting. Click HERE to hear more of Erik’s songs or to find out additional information about Cedarwell.

Tomorrow, for sure (unless my front and back doors are literally barricaded with snow), the children and I will go on some kind, any kind, of errand. We will leave this house!

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

I've got my love (and high calorie snacks) to keep me warm

This, my friends (attacking a humongous tub of cookies and cream ice cream with a spoon), is a bad idea. But, really, I have an excuse - a pretty good one - for my reckless behavior!

I know I promised that I would try and limit my references to winter and cold and ice, but OH MY GOSH! It is SNOW, SNOW, SNOWING again. Ten inches are expected. All you can see out our window is white. All you can hear is the wind howling and the sound of my children's fingernails clawing at the walls - oh yes, and my teeth chattering.

We are dry and all static-y. The kids are red cheeked and pale. We try and forget about bike rides and tire swings by playing dress-up, dancing in the living room and making treasure maps. I try and compensate for my atrophying muscles and lack of vitamin D by, sh-h-h-h (its a secret), mindlessly snacking (for the record, I've never pretended my plan was logical).

Homeschool co-op has been canceled for tomorrow (Wednesday) because of...you guessed it, yet another blizzard. Quick! Hide my jelly beans, the tortilla chips and animal crackers! Grab a blanket my darlings, find the Winnie the Pooh book (what a fantastic read!) and let us pass another day all curled up and cuddled together, dreaming of spring.

Monday, February 2, 2009

Ballerina Girl





Oh 5:00 pm Monday Ballet Class, how does Priscilla love thee? All night, I tell you, she's been counting and re-counting the ways. First there's the outfit, pink and flouncy. Then there's the teacher, skilled and devoted. The classroom? Appropriately mirrored with a ballet bar and CD player. And best of all are the positions and movements. Priscilla stretched and swayed and flexed with all her might, her energy, her attention; she was zealously eager to please. She is a butterfly, my daughter, social, and happiest when able to get out there in it and spread her wings. Is this really worth the time and expense? I wondered, while giving our debit card to the woman handling registration (It is difficult to afford anything "extra" these days). I couldn't have asked for a more satisfying confirmation. Thank you, mama! Thank you! Only six days left till next time! Priscilla told me as we drove back home.

You're welcome, baby.

Sunday, February 1, 2009

more time


Saturday was a work day - work, work, work from 10:00 am to 5:00 pm. That's how it goes when you're a habitual dawdler and let the clutter pile, gather dustily under beds, multiply. My motivation was ballet, gymnastics, soccer and drama - I've got handwritten receipts pinned to my corkboard confirming the fact that each of my children is now enrolled in an extra curricular activity of their choice. I delayed this chauffeuring stage as long as possible, but they're chomping at the bit to express themselves and since no one is wearing diapers anymore or napping regularly or needing to be nursed, I suppose there's nothing to stop us from moving forward into this next phase of parenting.

I've got the house in tip-top(ish) shape and our calendar up to date. We've purchased leotards and dancing shoes, a whiteboard to hang in the kitchen. All written down, it looks a tad overwhelming but then again, kind of exciting simultaneously. Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, we are booked. I never dreamed, when they were babies and we were sequestered in our condo without a car, that the weeks would eventually fly by instead of drag on all slow and intensive to the tune of Sesame Street and Goodnight Moon being read by yours truly over and over and over again.

This morning, due to hours of extensive reorganizing, things went smoother than we'd anticipated as we dressed and clipped fingernails and tamed cowlicks in preparation for Divine Liturgy. Instead of rushing and wasting fifteen plus minutes on searching for clean and/or matching socks, at 9:00 a.m. we were ready -ready to go ahead of schedule. There was time leftover, more time for pre-communion prayers and gathering necessities (i.e. Kleenex and Chap Stick). There was time, in fact, to everyone's absolute joy (I am deciding, here, to generously interpret the phrase, A-w-w Mom!, as an indication of pure delight) for a photo!

Nothing makes my heart soar like the sight of them, the four of them all together captured permanently in a state of well-groomedness and vibrant youth. I just took that picture and already I am nostalgic. Already it is evening and a new week is upon us. As I type this they are changing, maturing, growing in their beds.

What a crazy amazing adventure is motherhood.