Shopaholic Mama Goes Bananas…

…and artichoke and cantaloupe and spinach and strawberries.  I joined an organic produce coop at the boys’ preschool and today was the first delivery.  For $45, I got two reusable grocery bags filled to the gills with the following:

·     1 container of strawberries

·     2 bags of baby carrots

·     2 heads of spinach

·     1 head ofgreen leaf lettuce

·     1 bunch of bananas

·     5 yellow and green zucchinis

·     1 artichoke

·     1 head of cauliflower

·     2 cantaloupes

·     5 apples

·     9 roma tomatoes

·     10 yukon gold potatoes

·     3 large onions

Check out my beautiful bounty:

If I had walked into Whole Foods to buy all of this produce, it probably would have cost $145.  Right now I’m feeling as smug as an extreme couponer must feel when she gets a week’s worth of groceries for $1.59.  I’m far too lazy to aspire to that, but this – organic produce that I can bring home with me when I drop my kids off at school – I can do.

The challenge now is not to waste any of it. The fruit will be pretty easy to consume, but the veggies will require some effort.  Tonight we’re having salmon burgers from Whole Foods.  There’s spinach and feta mixed in and they’re delicious and I will not tell you how much they cost.  Okay, okay. They’re $5.99 each and worth every ridiculous penny.  At least I’m splurging on food instead of shoes.  Speaking of which, I’ve been pretty good with spending lately, but I digress.

Back to the bounty.  I’m going to make sautéed spinach and oven-baked potato wedges to go with the salmon burgers.  Tomorrow, I’m thinking of making pasta primavera with the zucchini, tomatoes and the remaining spinach.  Since we always end up with brown bananas in our house, maybe I’ll make banana bread this weekend.   Jessica Seinfeld’s book, “Deceptively Delicious,” has a great recipe for banana bread with pureed cauliflower hidden inside (it’s actually really good), and I also found arecipe on her Do It Delicious Web site for artichokes with a balsamic dipping sauce.  Yum.

Do I sound a little bit overly enthusiastic about all of this?  I probably am, but if cooking keeps me from obsessing about my root canal, which is now less than 48 hours away, then it’s a very good thing.  And who knows, maybe the boys will try something new?  It’s possible…  Maybe…  One can hope…

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Filed under cooking, dentist, food, shopaholism

Knowing Is So Much Better Than Not Knowing

My friend’s son had chronic ear infections when he was a baby.  The build-up of fluid in his ears got so bad that the doctor recommended inserting tubes.  The day they brought him home from the procedure, he watched Elmo on television and laughed.  That was when my friend realized it was the first time he actually heard Elmo’s voice.  The infections had affected his hearing and she didn’t know.

My friend told me this story the day Dylan was diagnosed with a sensory processing disorder.  I was drowning in guilt (and tears) for not doing something sooner and she reminded me that it happens to all of us in some way or another.  A few weeks later, I still feel like the Guiltiest Mama that ever lived, but I’m also finally starting to realize that Dylan’s diagnosis is the best thing that ever happened to me as a parent.

Good parenting requires love, patience, understanding, and all that good stuff. It also requires an insane amount of confidence. You have to know exactly how you want to raise your children and then you have to go about the work of doing it every single day. Without wavering.  Without worrying about anyone else’s judgment.  And most importantly, without second-guessing yourself. 

Somewhere along the way with Dylan, I lost my confidence.  His fears and anxieties, panic attacks, and overly stubborn behaviors with food, clothing, and noise stumped me.  I didn’t know whether to push him or pull back.  Expose him or protect him. Hug him or punish him.  I didn’t know why he acted and felt the way he did – and here comes the confidence killer – I thought it must have been my parenting.  I thought it was my fault.  Now I know it’s not.  

We went to a birthday party at an indoor gym yesterday afternoon and if a group activity included big jumps or forward rolls, Dylan sat down with me.  There was a time when that situation would frustrate me and make me wonder why he wouldn’t try new (fun) things, why he didn’t want to do what his friends were doing, and now for the guiltiest thought of them all, why he wasn’t normal like the other kids.  Now I know, and let me tell you, knowing so much better than not knowing.

Now I know why he doesn’t like to be upside down, why long-sleeves, pants, and bounce houses cause panic, why Operation Chicken was destined to fail, why the sound of lawn mowers and owls hooting made him afraid of his own backyard, and why his teacher asked if he had a hearing problem.  Now I know.

Ear tubes fixed my friend’s son, and OT will fix Dylan, too.  Some of his most unique attributes, like his emotional intensity and charming absent-minded professor-like way, are partly a result of his sensory issues.  But I’m not worried about the therapy taking any of that specialness away.  When Dylan woke up yesterday morning and I told him we were going to the birthday party, he looked at me with his big, bright morning eyes and said, “Wait a second, Mommy, am I going to turn five last?”  I said, “No, you won’t be last.  Sophia’s birthday is after yours,” to which he replied,“Yes, Sophia’s birthday is in Maine.” I said, “Not Maine, sweetheart. May.”  He said, “No, Mommy, Sophia’s birthday is in Maine.” 

I know that specialness isn’t going anywhere. 

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Filed under confidence, Guilty Mama, sensory processing disorder