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Joy A. Becker

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    • Most Popular
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    • Just An Average Day
    • Because One Day You Won't

one year ago

March 12, 2021 Joy Becker
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One year ago today was the last time I packed lunches for my children and sent them into someone else’s care. I rattled off a list of urgent instructions as they stood at the door zipping their coats. Don’t touch your face. Wash your hands every chance you get. Don’t share food. Don’t share chapstick. Stop touching your face. Didn’t their lives depend on these instructions? The past 24 hours brought an onslaught of hard hits, each one chipping away at normal and deepening a gash just the right size for fear.

*****

It was Thursday, March 12, about 3:00 in the afternoon, one day away from the kids’ spring break, and I was sitting on the living room floor with Milo waiting for Andrew to come home from preschool. The evening before I took Andrew to Mini Ninja class, and his teacher gave all the kids a squirt of hand sanitizer at the start of class. Well, I suppose she has to be extra careful. Chip. 

During Andrew’s class I called my mom in Chicago. We planned to meet her and my dad in Indianapolis the following week to go to the children’s museum, but all this talk of coronavirus was beginning to feel unsettling, and a children’s museum seemed like the ultimate petri dish. We canceled our plans, but our tickets would be good anytime in 2020. We can just go another time, probably over the summer when the coronavirus was gone. Chip.

As Milo and I played on the floor and watched out the window for Andrew, my phone buzzed with the official message that all Ohio schools were canceled for the next three weeks. Three weeks? Can they do that? Just cancel school for an entire state?  It felt daunting but not impossible. I foolishly imagined we would go to parks and to the zoo, maybe even squeeze in a playdate. I would definitely pack up the van to go visit my parents for a few days. An extended three week spring break. We could handle this. Might even be fun.

Within minutes of the governor's announcement about schools, my phone was blowing up with the thoughts and opinions of friends and family all over the country. It wasn’t just Ohio; schools all over the country were shutting down. Some thought it an overreaction, others celebrated freedom from school, but most, myself included, didn’t know what to think. The seriousness of it all couldn’t be overlooked, but I was teetering on a ledge and one faulty step could send me tumbling into anxiety. I didn’t let myself go there—yet.

*****

Stephen left early the next morning and called within a few minutes. He stopped at Kroger to pick up a gift card for someone at work, but at 8:00 in the morning the lines to check out were 30 people deep. Chip.

I put Charlotte on the bus—Wait. Did the girl next to her just cough?—and dropped Andrew off at preschool where he greeted his friend with a hug —A hug? Oh my gosh, he’s going to be the death of our family. I sat in the preschool parking lot debating whether or not to call the doctor. Milo had been fighting what was clearly manifesting as an ear infection, but it seemed like there were more serious medical concerns going on than ear infections. I decided to call and an automated voice told me I was 14th in line to speak with someone. Chip. 

The doctor was able to see Milo that morning. Relief. I didn’t know at the time how those tiny moments of relief would sustain me in the upcoming months. All the toys were cleared from the waiting room, and we were ushered to a room in the far back that I had never been in before. The visit was brief, faster than any other time we’d been there. It didn’t seem normal, but Milo indeed had a double ear infection and getting in and out of the doctor’s office felt like a victory. I took a deep breath and wondered if this coronavirus thing maybe wouldn’t be that bad. 

We tried to drop off books at the library on our way back home, but they were not accepting returns anymore. Chip.

Soon after we got home I saw a picture on Facebook of the line at Costco, stretching into the parking lot, people waiting hours just to get into the store. I did a mental tally of our food supply. Chip.  

I foolishly kept scrolling and saw another picture of an empty meat case at Kroger and an article about a nationwide shortage of toilet paper. I did another mental tally of our toilet paper supply. Chip. Chip. 

Information and updates came faster than I could keep up. Emails from every company I’d ever given my email address to sent updates on how their business would handle the upcoming weeks. It was a parade of cancelations. First soccer, then Mini Ninja class, then ballet. The library was closing. The zoo was closing. Airline travel was restricted. Italy was shut down. Hand sanitizer was selling for $100 on Amazon. Church would be live streaming. The president officially declared this a pandemic. Tom Hanks tested positive for coronavirus. Facebook was overflowing with 50 Great Activities to do With Kids at Home and 10 Tips to Help You Thrive While Homeschooling. There were color-coded sample schedules to help me survive my day. There were free virtual story hours and craft hours and yoga hours. We could gather by the computer to draw with Mo Willems at noon and then meet a zoo animal every day at three. Educational websites offered a free month trial. Stephen’s coworkers were packing up their entire work stations. I saw someone wearing a mask. What does shelter-in-place even mean?

My head was spinning, trying to not slip over the edge because the kids would be home from school soon, and I didn’t want them to be afraid or disappointed. Certainly the pain in my chest was anxiety and not coronavirus.

“Are we still going to be able to go on the field trip to the aquarium in April?” Charlotte asked as we walked home from the bus stop. It didn’t cross my mind that we wouldn’t walk home from the bus stop again for at least another year.

“Well, I’m not sure. I think a lot of fun activities over the next few weeks will be canceled, so it might be best if we start thinking of fun things we can do at home instead.”

What a lame response. As if anything we could do at home would be as fun as a field trip to the aquarium. I could tell she was disappointed, but really I was just being cautious, trying to prepare her just in case. The field trip was over a month away.

Certainly things would be under control by then.

In Average Day, Readers' Favorite
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favorite things: february 2021

February 28, 2021 Joy Becker
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Hello again. I hope this tiny month was kind to you. I hope you texted that person you kept thinking about, and I hope you asked for help when you needed it. I hope you remembered to move the clothes from the washer to the dryer before they smelled like eggs, and I hope you found a reason to wear red lipstick, even if your mask covered it up. I hope one night you turned off Netflix and read a book, and I hope another night you closed the book and watched Netflix. (I’m looking at you Firefly Lane.) I hope you said yes to something that made you smile. I hope you found your keys quickly when you were running late, and I hope you spit in the face of any lie that told you your body didn’t look like it should. I hope you cooked something really tasty, and I hope someone else cleaned up all the dishes. I hope the car next to you saw you dancing at the red light, and I hope it made them want to dance too. And I hope you found some new favorites.


Reading

I read three book this month—The Guest List by Lucy Foley, Glitter and Glue by Kelly Corrigan, and Shiner by Amy Jo Burns—all of which earned a solid 4/5 stars. However, I would not call any of these books my favorites, and if I am to stay true to the title of this post, I will not bog you down with reviews of books I deemed good but not great. I consider them each a worthy read but didn’t have that “please-don’t-end-I’m-going-to-miss-hanging-out-with-you” feeling that I get with a five star book. For my true favorite book of the month, see below.


Reading with My Darlings

The Very Very Far North by Dan Bar-el: This was without a doubt, one of the most delightful books I have ever read with my children. We were thrilled to discover a sequel came out last fall! Even if you don’t have elementary aged children, you want to read this book. You will fall in love with each adorable character, and even if animated voices don’t feel like your thing, I double-dog-dare you to read this without letting your sillies come out. My 8-year-old wrote a review on my Goodreads account that you can check out. (P.S. Teaching your children to write a review on Goodreads that includes a brief summary and opinion is an excellent way to give them real-life opportunities to write and engage as a reader. I have a separate Goodreads shelf called “Charlotte’s Reviews.”) If forced to give a teeny, tiny, criticism of this book, it would be that the chapters are long which makes it difficult to squeeze in one more chapter before bed.


Eating

We have been intentionally eating vegetarian meals 3-4 days a week. We’ve had a few misses—sorry about those Black Bean & Quinoa Tacos, kids—but fortunately, we’ve had even more wins. This vegetarian chili claims it is “actually, the best vegetarian chili ever.” We agree. So much so, that I made it twice this month.

And from our most used cookbook, my children consumed these vegetarian peanut butter noodles like vultures.

Charlotte has decided she is making a new kind of brownie every month. January was chocolate-mint (my favorite!), and this month was peanut butter chocolate. Prepare to gasp as I admit to you that peanut butter and chocolate is one of my least favorite combinations (sorry Reese’s) which is why I was shocked to find myself shoveling a second brownie into my mouth when everyone was in the other room. Well, not that shocked. My point is: these brownies were good. *Note* She used butter, not margarine, and she added chocolate chips to the batter.


What’s Making Me Smile

We actually had snow in Cincinnati this year! Like real, cannot-see-the-grass-poking-out-snow. Two-thirds of the children have reached the glorious age where they can stay outside for hours WITHOUT me. They keep their mittens on, they walk up the sledding hill (read: our yard), and they laugh instead of wail when the sled flips over leaving them face down in the snow. I sit by the window and make the hot chocolate. Amazing.

I am a long time fan of meal planning. It saves both my sanity and my budget, and I would have no idea how to feed my family without a plan. I can’t believe I am about to say this in regards to the year 2020, but I felt like weeks were just flying by, and before I even unpacked the groceries, it was already time to meal plan for the next week. It was exhausting. Enter monthly meal planning of 2021. I now plan for the entire month in one sitting. It has been amazing. Weekly meal planning plus making the grocery list was such an ordeal. Now I can whip out a grocery list in no time since all the planning is posted on a calendar, and since I have done this for an entire two months, I’m obviously committed. (Check back in August…)

You can be sure it will be a rare occasion that I ever show you a favorite things picture from our home. There will be no throw pillows, no light fixtures, and no favorite curtains. I know my strengths; home design is not one of them. I take months (years) to make decisions about even the smallest purchases. When I say I have been looking for a way to store books in the hallway outside of the kids’ bedrooms for a year, I actually mean a full year plus a few more months. But, I love this new wall organizer, and although I wish it was about $100 cheaper, it was time to pull the trigger already. And I do smile every time I walk by it.

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Because One Day You Won’t: A Shortened Version of This Series

Because one day you won’t take Valentine’s Day so seriously.

Because one day you won’t go outside at 7:30 in the morning to excavate toy bugs out of a block of ice in your Christmas pajamas.

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Until next time,

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In Favorite Things
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when love hangs out in the sludge

February 19, 2021 Joy Becker
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Fifteen years ago, all six of us were on the same page. We aren’t anymore. 

That realization would have launched me into a panic as a senior in college. I would have wept with confusion and fear and doubt, praying for us to come back together in agreement and unity. What I understand now that I didn’t before is that unity and agreement are not the same thing. 

We’ve all changed, but we haven't all changed in the same ways. We’re all asking questions, but not the same questions. We’re all letting go of some things, but not the same things. We’re all keeping some things, but not the same things. 

Disagreement is unsettling, and I have to fight my gut response to keep talking it out until we get back to common ground. It rattles my soul to think that ground might be gone, and my mind starts asking ridiculous questions like, “Can we still be friends, like best friends, if our faith doesn’t look the same? Will they think I’m naive because I still believe? Will they think I’m hellbound because I don’t?  Were we wrong before? Are we wrong now?” 

There was ease in reciting the answers our faith offered rather than wading through the muddy questions our faith compels. 

Maybe that’s our new common ground: murky, knee-deep sludge. 

It makes sense that love hangs out in the sludge. 

This season, these questions and doubts will forever hold a spot in our journey, but we all know better than to believe this is our landing spot. It can’t be. We’re not done yet.


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in this series "280 Words".

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In Friendship
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favorite things: january 2021

January 31, 2021 Joy Becker
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I’m such a sucker for some favorite things. I love recommendations that save me hours of searching and shopping on my own because P.S. - I hate shopping. I get easily overwhelmed by too many choices which means the mall and the internet leave me exhausted and crabby. I much prefer when someone I trust tells me, “Oooo, I love this lipstick, bra, candle, podcast, book, and coffee! You will love it, too.” Yes, please. Done and done.

Each month of 2021, I will be pulling together a small collection of my monthly favorites, so hopefully you too can find a “yes, please, done and done” on this page.


Reading

Party of Two by Jasmine Guillory: Sometimes I want books to touch my heart or challenge my thinking, but sometimes I just want a solid rom-com, and this one hit the spot. It was a fun read that I sped through in just a couple days. I’d love to know if you’ve read anything else by Guillory! 4/5 Stars

Bless This Mess by Rev. Molly Baskette and Ellen O’Donnell: This one was recommended by Sarah Bessey, and she rarely disappoints. I don’t agree with everything in this book—which is probably true of most parenting books—but it is a great starting place for thinking and discussion. I marked it up with dozens of post-it notes, and I know Stephen is eagerly waiting for me to go point by point through all my thoughts and questions. 5/5 Stars


Reading with My Darlings

One of the best parts of homeschooling is extra time to read all the amazing books that fill our library shelves. I adore our public library, and at least three times a week, I launch into a lengthy monologue about how public libraries are the greatest gift to modern society and the debt to which we owe those who have gone before us to pave the way for FREE access to books. (Charlotte: Mom’s talking about the library again. Stephen: Just let her be.) I currently have 92 books checked out of our public library, so this list could on for miles, but with the help of my darlings, I’ve limited it to our top four.

Ranger In Time Series by Kate Messner: This has been one of my favorite series to recommend to 3rd-5th grade students for years, and I’ve eagerly awaited the perfect opportunity to introduce them to my kids. (They are 6 and 8, so I’m reading them out loud.) I took a writing class with Kate Messner in 2015 when she was just beginning this series. I’m a lover of historical fiction, and what better way to bring this genre to kids than with a lovable golden retriever! We’ve been in an Earth Science unit, so it was the perfect opportunity to read Disaster on the Titanic (while learning about glaciers and icebergs) and Journey Through Ash and Smoke (while learning about volcanoes). Hurricane Katrina Rescue and Escape from the Great Earthquake are up next!

The Three Little Gators by Albert Whitman: Andrew is in kindergarten which means we work on a lot of retelling simple stories. The Three Little Pigs is perfect for this, so I check out a few (read: 10-15) versions of this story. Most of them I was familiar with, but this one was new to me, and we loved it! It was such a fun twist on the classic story.

The Top of the World: Climbing Mount Everest by Steve Jenkins: First of all, Steven Jenkins is our favorite. If you are not familiar with his brilliant collection of nonfiction books for kids, get on your library website and start clicking away. During our Earth Science unit we learned about the formation of mountains and ended up on a rabbit trail of all things Mount Everest, and this book was packed with cool information!


Listening To

This episode from The Happy Hour with Jamie Ivey has been in my queue for a couple months, and I finally gave it a listen. Navigating parenthood with the additional challenges of phones and computers feels so daunting, but this podcast gave some good starting points and reminders.


Eating

For nearly 10 years, I have wanted a Le Creuset Dutch Oven, but man are those suckers expensive. I hemmed and hawed over this decision, and finally Stephen just pulled the trigger for me and bought me this one for Christmas (in red.) We decided to exchange it for a smaller size, so I didn’t really dive into this beauty until a couple weeks ago, and I’m already regretting all those years of braising I’ll never get back. I’m using it all the time! One of my most-used cook books, Dinner: A Love Story, has provided some of our tastiest opportunities with pork ragu, our favorite chicken soup, and this chicken pot pie (I just used the filling recipe, and we poured it over biscuits).


What’s Making Me Smile

With the addition of that large and oh-so-pretty red Dutch Oven, I needed to do some rearranging in our tiny kitchen. I began with the underneath cupboards which lead to the up above cupboards which lead to a total reorganization of the kitchen. The last time I organized those cupboards was the day we moved it. Things needed some reshuffling, and now, I can empty the entire dishwasher without taking a single step. #smallkitchenbenefits This definitely makes me smile.

My mom bought me this from Athleta, and now I want it in every color.

I bought this from Glossier for a secret sister gift exchange in December and ended up buying one for myself, too.


Because One Day You Won’t: A Shortened Version of This Series

Because one day you won’t spread across this table to fumble our way through another day of homeschool.

Because one day you won’t surprise your dad by decorating his office for Valentine’s Day.

Because one day you won’t both fit in a toddler bed.

Because one day you won’t give yourself a pretend black eye with a pen.

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*We take a lot of pictures of our kids sleeping. They’re just too cute when they sleep, right?


And Finally, Some News

Stephen and I have been certified foster parents since 2019 and have spent the past year helping foster care families by doing short term respite care. Over the summer we told our agency we were ready to accept a placement, and earlier this month, an 11-month-old little girl came to live with us. The transition to four children has been difficult and sweet, exhausting and exciting. There is so much pain that comes alongside a foster care placement, so much loss and grief and a desperate need for healing. We pray every day for this little darling’s mother and father—praying that Jesus would capture their hearts and change their lives so their daughter would be able to return safely home. For our family, it is honor to step in and fill the gap during this time.


Until next time,

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savoring this school year

November 20, 2020 Joy Becker
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We had this date night on the calendar for weeks, just Andrew and me. In true 2020 fashion, we made reservations for a time slot at the pool, and then went for curbside pick up at Dairy Queen. Afterward, we hit up Target to buy Andrew’s school supplies. I’ve made this annual outing twice before with his older sister, but this was Andrew’s first official journey into the magical aisles of school supplies. He would start kindergarten in two weeks, and it was finally his turn to flip through folders and gaze at all those perfectly pointed pencils. Unblemished erasers and the scent of new crayons were calling his name, and even though Andrew isn’t much of a crafty kid, he still gets pretty jazzed about a fresh glue stuck. But I should clarify that what Andrew would actually start in two weeks was virtual kindergarten which means back-to-school shopping is more appropriately titled keep-staying-at-home-and-now-log-onto-a-computer-each-morning shopping. 

And that kind of shopping is pretty lame. 

Fortunately, he didn’t know any differently, so I put on my happy face and talked up the school supplies even though our list was only two items long. We already have plenty of pencils and scissors and notebooks, and we’re pretty much drowning in crayons and markers. The only items on his supply list that we did not have at home were those My First Pencils—the big thick ones for tiny hands, and a blue and yellow folder with prongs. So when I say I talked up this shopping excursion, you can see I had my work cut out for me. 

“Whoa, buddy! Look at these big pencils! This is so cool! Your sister didn't get to buy these big pencils. These are just for kindergartners. And prongs! Do you know about prongs? Let’s hurry over to the folder aisle so I can show. You’re gonna love prongs.” 

To my great fortune, the pack of My First Pencils came with a small pencil sharpener which was the highlight of the 3 minutes we spent in the school section. He wasn’t as fascinated by the prongs. 

*****

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By the time I pulled up a chair next to Andrew on his first morning of virtual kindergarten, I was already maxed out. The buildup to school was both nonexistent and completely draining. We had shuffled the children’s rooms around, moved beds, borrowed desks, hung bulletin boards, and printed schedules to hang in every room of the house. And now I was stepping into the role of learning partner, not just for Andrew, but also for his second grade sister, a role that required me to be “available” to help during the school day. I joined millions of parents across America who suddenly landed the job of administrative assistant to their child—managing various schedules, downloading software updates, and documenting logins and passwords, all while keeping the half-naked potty-training toddler out of the background of the class meetings. And I’m proud to say that only once did my child’s teacher need to schedule a call with me to ask that I keep the “exposed baby” away from the camera.

After months of motherhood demanding more of me than I had, virtual school felt like the slow, painful peeling off of my last layer. How many times a day could I die to myself and still have something left?

For the past nine months, I had made the best of a crummy situation. My creative energy and positive spirit were in overdrive as we’d head out for yet another family walk, and I’d carried on about how wonderful it was to have all this extra family time. Well kids, we might not love everything about being quarantined, but it’s the best decision for our family right now and we’ll make the best of it! School felt like yet another situation for this same tired pep talk. Well kids, we might not love everything about virtual school, but it’s the best decision for our family right now and we’ll make the best of it! 

But our best efforts weren’t working, and three weeks into the school year, we decided to unenroll our children from virtual school to homeschool instead. The notion was comical. 

Hadn’t I just spent weeks (i.e. months) surviving on fumes, and now I was going to solve this problem by homeschooling? It was ridiculous. When the governor shut down schools for three weeks in March, it felt like too much. I couldn’t imagine a lockdown with three children for three weeks. Now, somehow, I was willingly signing up to be with these children everyday for the next year AND be fully responsible for their education. This wasn’t lining up.

But I was crumbling under the demands of virtual school, starving under a mountain of boredom as I locked myself upstairs running back and forth troubleshooting technology and reiterating the need to sit in a chair and pay attention to the screen, a screen I’ve put so much effort into limiting. 

“Get back on your computer! You can finish with the Legos later! Right now you need to be on your computer.” 

These unfamiliar words felt poisonous. We had gone from months of extreme freedom to a day dictated by the schedule posted on our new bulletin board telling us to eat our snack from 9:55-10:10. These new restrictions were taking the frustration of 2020 to an unhealthy level for our family. But homeschool? Could I really do this? Time for another pep talk.

Well kids (and Joy), we might not love everything about homeschooling, but it’s the best decision for our family right now, and we'll make the best of it! 

I didn’t believe a word of it., but my bar for making the best of it was pretty low at this point.

*****

We explored nonfiction books all week, and it was now our turn to take a crack at writing our own. Charlotte was already off and away designing a magazine about pumpkins as I sat next to Andrew to begin my daily opening line about how the first thing an author needs is an idea. 

“I already know that, mom. You tell me everyday.” 

“Well, today darling, you get to be the teacher as you write and draw,” I said in my half teacher, half mom voice.“You need to pick an idea that you know a lot about, so you can teach your readers. What do you know a lot about?”

At this point I was paving a trail for the answer I expected. Andrew is an animal expert, devouring and remembering the strangest pieces of information he’s gathered from animal books, movies, and countless trips to the zoo. I was ready for him to pick an animal, draw a picture, and write a simple sentence. Snails have thousands of teeth. Dogs can only see blue and yellow and gray. Geckos shed their skin and eat it. It seemed pretty cut and dry, but Andrew wasn’t taking my bait. He had no interest in writing about animals today. 

“I want to write a recipe book like Charlotte,” he announced. Charlotte has written a handful of recipe books, and by written I mean she either makes up recipes she hasn’t tried or copies them from her favorite dessert bloggers. (Sidenote, if Charlotte ever sends you a recipe in the mail, contact me first before making it. It will be crucial to know if this is one of her own, untested creations. And once again Smith family, I apologize for the chocolate pudding disaster.) I understood that Andrew wanted to mimic his big sister, but a recipe seemed like a big undertaking for a little boy with minimal writing stamina. I continued to suggest animals he was more familiar with, planting my feet firmly in the plan I had imagined. 

“No, I want to write a recipe.”

“Ok,” I said, slowly drawing out the K. “What do you know how to make?” I asked with part curiosity and part smugness, ready for his grand idea to hit its first wall. 

“Cinnamon sugar toast,” he announced. Everything about his face told me he was saying “duh” in his head.

My mind swirled to figure out the next step needed to help him create a recipe. I knew I couldn't shut down his confidence, but this was not my plan. Did we have the freedom to completely ditch my plan? How-to writing wasn’t scheduled for at least another month. Isn’t this the beauty of homeschooling? I can ditch the plan and go with the flow, right? During this internal 20 second debate, Andrew drew two lines, splitting his paper into 4 boxes. He numbered the boxes 1, 2, 3, 4, and then started drawing all sort of rectangles in box #1. 

“What are you doing?” I asked. 

“These are going to be my steps. First you need ingredients.” He pointed to each rectangle in box #1 and named his ingredient. “This is the toaster, the bread, the cinnamon, the sugar, and the butter. Oh, and you need a plate.” He added a circle. “And a knife!” He smiled up at me, and although he never said it, we both knew his idea was better than mine. 

*****

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For fourteen years, I have been teaching young children to read and write. I have nothing to contribute to a conversation about investments, interior design, event planning, or business start-ups, but if you want to talk about early literacy development and six traits of writing, I’m your girl. My favorite part of the school day was writing workshop when I pulled kids to a horseshoe shaped table or sat down next to a child in a chair meant for a six-year-old, all for the sake of putting pencil to paper. We brainstormed ideas, attempted to spell words that seemed too hard, drew pictures to enhance the story, pushed through writer's blocks, and celebrated writing in all its beautiful forms because these students had become authors. I loved it. 

And somehow, in the midst of this nightmare we call 2020, I was given the chance to sit next to Andrew and watch him become an author.

This mushy feeling inside me, the one clogging my throat and blurring my eyes came with a strange realization. I’m not inclined to look for the good. All that silver lining, glass half-full nonsense irks me. I mean, why can’t the bad just be bad? Why do I have to look for diamonds in my rough and roses in my thorn bushes? But this felt different; it wasn’t a bright side or a fake smile or a mustering up of positivity from a dry and cracked well. It felt lucky, like winning a little jackpot. It felt like relief and genuine joy, and for the first time in nine months I could see our family moving past survival. This school year—the one that started with tears because I didn't want my kids in front of a computer all day, but I also didn’t want them to miss out on buses and backpack and gathering on a colorful carpet to listen to Kevin Henkes books—had become a gift. 

We have every intention of sending our children back to public school next fall (famous last words, right?), but I have a hunch that this school year, this wretched 2020 school year, will be one of my favorites.


This post is part of a blog hop with Exhale—an online community of women pursuing creativity alongside motherhood, led by the writing team behind Coffee + Crumbs. Click here to view the next post in this series "Savor".

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