Category Archives: food issues

Bounce

This is how my anxiety works:  I discover pins and needles in my left foot, so I must have a tumor in my spine.  (By the way, the MRI I had last week was clear.)  I find a new freckle on my arm, so I probably have skin cancer.  I write a blog for a while.  Then, one day I decide I should write a book.  Right away.  Before it’s too late and I’ve become an old lady full of regret (if the melanoma hasn’t already killed me).

Of all the possibilities, I jump to the worst-case scenario.  I bounce directly from A to Z, and in the process, I skip a lot of important stops in the middle.  Working with my life coach over the last few months has helped me (1) slow down and (2) focus on B, C, D, and so on.  With her guidance, the elusive book is still in my future, but I’ve slowed down enough to improve the blog design, add a URL, beef up my writing skills, and experiment with new features, like giveaways. With less bouncing around, I’ve accomplished more on my blog than I ever imagined.

(Speaking of giveaways, there’s still time to enter to win tickets to the June 2nd advanced screening of “Madagascar 3: Europe’s Most Wanted” – South Florida readers only!  All you have to do is click here and leave a comment at the end of Monday’s “Crackalackin” post.)

A few weeks ago, I had a one-on-one session with Dylan’s occupational therapist about his mealtime challenges.  She asked me, “What are you afraid of?”  I said, “I’m afraid he’ll be a thirty-year-old man who only eats boxed macaroni and cheese and fruit squeezers.”  (Bounce.)  After delicately reminding me that he’s currently a five-year-old boy, she asked me what I want right now.  I said, “Well, I’d like to tie him to a chair and force-feed him a roasted chicken.”  (Bounce.)  Then I said, “But, I’d settle for him sitting at the dinner table for more than 30 seconds.”

And that was it.  Just like with the blog (and my health), I’d been bouncing around when what I really needed to do was stop moving.  Instead of forcing Dylan to sit at the table and try half a dozen new foods in one meal (and wonder why there was crying, whining, and chaos), I needed to work on getting him to simply sit at the table.  Just a few weeks into our new mealtime plan, dinnertime has become a lot less stressful.

Last weekend at a birthday party, Dylan went inside a bounce house for the very first time…and absolutely loved it. Until then, he wouldn’t go near a bounce house.  He was terrified.  I think it was a combination of the noise from the air blowers and the feeling of instability inside (a sensory nightmare).  As you can imagine, this has caused me a great deal of anxiety (and a lot of bouncing) over the years.

I actually don’t care much for bounce houses.  In fact, nothing makes me happier than knowing Riley is old enough to go in a bounce house without my assistance.  (Yes, Riley loves bounce houses.)  I believe people can avoid bounce houses and still lead successful and productive lives.  What bothers me is Dylan’s Fear.

I’ve brought Dylan to dozens of bounce house birthday parties only to see him cower in a corner.  I’ve seen the simultaneous fright and longing in his eyes as he’s watched his friends bounce in, out, up, down, and all around bounce houses.  He’s always wanted to join them, but he couldn’t, and that kind of phobia is dangerous.

On Saturday, though, he stared down the Fear and bounced.  And bounced and bounced and bounced!  Once he realized how fun it was, we could hardly get him out.

(I’ll get in big trouble if I don’t mention here that Mike played a big role in getting Dylan to go in the bounce house at the birthday party.  Yes, there was a little bribery involved, but no matter what I offered, he never would have done it for me.  It pains me to admit this, but Mike is the Dylan Whisperer.  I am not.)

It’s hard to describe what it felt like to witness Dylan conquer this fear, to break down the wall he was hiding behind.  It was a feeling of lightness – a weight lifted off my chest and a blend of joy, pride, hope, and possibility.  It was similar to what I felt when he got dressed for his graduation pictures.  After the birthday party, I hesitated sharing the news because I didn’t want anyone to deflate (pun intended) the delight I felt.  I also chose not to write about it until now so the glory would be all mine for a few days.

Every kid has a struggle, an issue, or a quirk.  And every parent has to figure out how to help them through it, all the while managing their own personal idiosyncrasies (i.e. Crazy).  In my case, I’m working on doing less bouncing.  In Dylan’s case, he’s working on doing more bouncing.  Big, brave, beyond belief bouncing.

5 Comments

Filed under anxiety, food issues, Madagascar, phobia, sensory processing disorder

Books, Goals, Guilt, and Gratitude

Shopping at amazon.com is too easy.  They don’t even put me through the hassle of entering the last four digits of the credit card I have on file (believe it or not, I don’t have it memorized).  I just click a few times, the order is placed, and as long as I spend twenty-five dollars (e-a-s-y), the shipping is free.

What did I buy this time?  Books. I bought “Making Babies: Stumbling Into Motherhood” by Anne Enright and “Confessions of a Scary Mommy: An Honest and Irreverent Look at Motherhood: The Good, The Bad and the Scary” by Jill Smokler.  I purchased both books for opposition research (ha!).  I’d like to write a book about motherhood, too, so it makes sense to see what others in the field are doing.

I read an interview online with Anne Enright and then read an excerpt from her book, which made me want to weep (happy weeping) because her writing is so brilliant and honest.  Jill Smokler is a mom who started a blog, built a brand and then wrote a book.  Now she’s buying cute book tour outfits, doing the morning talk show circuit, and probably shopping around Hollywood for a movie deal.  I’m sure she’s really nice and a great mom, but I kinda hate her.    (Jealous Mama alert!)  I just hope if there’s room in the world for a Scary Mommy, then there’s room for a Runaway Mama, too.

Just so you know, I bought both of these books in hardcover.  This Shopaholic Mama wasn’t going to wait around for paperback, and the Kindle versions weren’t much cheaper.  Lately, I’ve been reading books the old-fashioned way.  I still love the way a book feels in my hands, and besides that, my Kindle is getting old and I want a new one.  (Mike, if you’re reading, Mother’s Day is just around the corner.)

Here are the other books piled on my desk and bedside table just waiting for a lazy, rainy, kid-free, dish-free, laundry-free, blog-free day (i.e. never):

“How To Get Your Kid To Eat…But Not Too Much” by Ellyn Satter.  This book had promise until page four.  In talking about a young child’s early food experiences, Satter wrote:

“Very few adults would be willing to deliberately do something that would hurt a child’s feelings or lower her self esteem.  But that happens all the time in feeding.  It happens because adults have their own hangups about eating and play them out in the way they feed their children.” 

That was as far as I got with that book.  Go ahead, tell me I didn’t give it a chance, but I think I’m smart enough to know that I’ve reached the maximum limit of guilt that one Mama can handle.  Reading that passage brought me straight back to the baby food aisle where I would buy 20-30 jars of Earth’s Best baby food per week and subject Dylan to pureed spaghetti with cheese or vegetable beef pilaf.  He hated all of it, but I was a New and Isolated Mama, and I didn’t know what or how else to feed him.

“The Magician’s Assistant” and “The Patron Saint of Liars,” both by Ann Patchett.  My friend Colby, who works in publishing, sent me these books after a conversation we had about Patchett’s “Bel Canto,” which is one of the best books I’ve ever read.  I started “The Magician’s Assistant” a few months ago and it’s wonderful, but I got sidetracked by, well, motherhood.

“The Weird Sisters” by Eleanor Brown.  I don’t know much about this book, but I kept hearing about in the blogosphere, and I succumbed during a fierce shopaholic moment in Barnes and Noble.  I love buying books as much as I love buying $58 t-shirts at Anthropologie.  I’m not sure when I’ll read it.  Maybe after Riley goes to college.  That will be around 2027.

“Raising A Sensory Smart Child” by Lindsey Biel and Nancy Peske and “No Longer A Secret: Unique Common Sense Strategies for Children with Sensory Motor Challenges” by Doreit S. Bailer and Lucy Jane Miller.  Every time Dylan’s OT recommends a book, I buy it immediately.  Doing so gives me a sense of control over a situation of which I have none.  This is what happens when I try reading these books: (1) I get confused because sensory processing disorder is so freakin’ complicated and intangible to me, and (2) I cry.  I have a lot of guilt – still – about not diagnosing Dylan sooner. My sanity and emotional well-being depends on these books’ indexes occasionally being browsed but their pages rarely being read.

“The Space Between Us” by Thrity Umrigar.  I started reading this gem of a book because it was chosen for my next book club meeting.  I’m enjoying it every time I have a few minutes to read a few pages, but I have no babysitter the night of book club, so this one, unfortunately, might join the Ann Patchett books and “The Weird Sisters” and be read in about 15 years.

There are at least a dozen more books stacked on the lower shelf of my bedside table, but those are so far down on the queue that I’m not going to write about them (or think about them or look at them).  In fact, my 2012 gratitude journal is strategically resting on top of them.  That’s been gathering some dust lately, too.  Shit. Or, as I try to say around the kids, sugar snaps.

April 5, 2012 – I’m grateful for the abundance of books in my life…whether I read them or not.  I’m also grateful I had the chance to give two large bags of children’s books to my cleaning lady who is going to give them to her church. (ß Paying it forward!)

What books have you bought, read, not read, hid and or given away recently?

Leave a comment

Filed under books, food issues, gratitude, guilt, Jealous Mama, jealousy, sensory processing disorder, Shopaholic Mama, shopping