Grandma’s big adventure

025After 27+ hours in transit, my mom arrived here in Vienna yesterday evening.  (Yay!)  I went to meet her at the airport, brought her home, she played with Benjamin and Liam (mostly Benjamin, because it was late and Liam fell asleep shortly after she arrived).  We let Benjamin stay up late to play with Grandma — he was thrilled.

Today, we had a quiet morning playing here at home and this afternoon we set out for a walk to explore a little and have lunch.  Grandma got to see the Freyung, the Graben, Michaelerplatz, the Hofburg, the Volksgarten, the Rathaus and the Burgtheater — which sounds like a lot, but we really just walked by everything (except the Volksgarten, where we spent a little time and followed some ducks around).  Dan met us and we all went out to dinner.

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Right now, she and Benjamin are down in our courtyard playing golf (or baseball, I wasn’t clear on which).  I am so glad she’s here.  Benjamin is so glad she’s here.  Dan is so glad that she’s here.  Liam seems really glad that she’s here (with Liam, it can be hard to tell).  Even Bailey is thrilled (“Oh good!  The cookie lady has arrived!”).  We have all missed her so much.

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In some ways, I really can’t believe she’s here — I also can’t believe she made this journey, by herself, to come and see us, especially on such short notice (she’s a planner, like I am, and we do best with lots of time to think over every possible complication and come up with a strategy to handle it).  It is her first international trip in over 30 years, and we are honored to have it be to see us.  It is a wonderful part of our adventure here, and I hope it turns out to be a fantastic adventure for her.

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I want my mommy

If all goes well, my mom will arrive here in Vienna in a few hours.  I am so excited — this will be the first time I’ve seen her (or anyone in my family, aside from on Skype) since we came here in April.  This is the longest I’ve ever been away from my mom (and my family in general).

Her trip kind of came together at the last minute (thanks to a wonderful aunt who helped her get here) so we didn’t know for sure that she was coming until she got on the plane yesterday afternoon.

I can’t wait to see her.  I can’t wait to show her our place, my favorite things in Vienna, and to have her share in how wonderful Benjamin and Liam are right now.  Especially Liam — she hasn’t seen him for 40% of his life, so he’s basically a completely different creature than he was the last time she saw him.  She’s going to get to know him all over again.  And, I can’t wait just to talk to her.  I’ve missed her so much.

I’m so excited to have her visit!  Yay!

Yelling

I yelled at Benjamin today.  Again.  I feel awful.  Again.

It doesn’t happen often, but it does happen from time to time — I’m stressed out, and one of the kids does something that is, legitimately, frustrating or anger-worthy, and I get upset.  But, I get more upset than is warranted by whatever it is that they did.

Today, it was an empty soda bottle to the back of my head, courtesy of Benjamin.  (But, of course, that isn’t *really* what it was about — it started hours earlier as frustration towards Dan.  However, Dan was at work, and I hadn’t had an opportunity to talk to him about it yet, except by text, so I was keeping a lid on it.)  So, Benjamin chucked the soda bottle and I turned around and yelled at him.  “Do not throw things at people!”  I was angrier than I needed to be, but not totally out of line.  He was shocked, but not overly upset.

Then, to calm myself, I walked away (from the dining room to the kitchen — not far) and took a few breaths.  But, for some reason, this set him off, and he followed me, crying.  For some reason, this set me off and I turned around and said to him, “Stop crying or go away until you can stop crying!”

Ugh.

Awesome.  I’m the crappiest mom EVER.  (Ok, not really, but I didn’t know that I had that particular gem of parenting in me.)  I’m really disappointed that I said this to my child.  I walked away, again, to try and compose myself, he cried harder, and I fell apart, crying and apologizing (another winning move) and then he cried even harder.

We cuddled and kissed and played a couple of games and watched tv and I gave him a bottle and I think we’ve made up.  I upset him, to be sure, but like before, I think me being upset was the most traumatic part for him.

I do not want to yell at my kids for stupid stuff — certainly not because I’m irritated with Dan.  I have to get a handle on my stress levels.

In my own way

The thing about the fear of success is that it doesn’t manifest in an obvious way.  Very few people sit around and think, “Success?  Oh, yeah, I don’t want that!  That sounds awful!  I’m afraid of it!”  That isn’t how it goes — it’s much more insidious than that.

As part of my birthday celebration, I went and saw the latest Harry Potter movie in the theater (and thoroughly enjoyed myself).  It got me thinking about the series’ author, J. K. Rowling, and the wild success she’s had as an author.  She was only 31 when she sold the first book in the Harry Potter series, and much younger when she wrote it.  She has been phenomenally, incomparably, unprecedentedly successful as an author.  I don’t presume that my future will ever look anything like hers, but still, I believe that my future success may, in fact, lie in the same area:  writing.  As soon as my brain makes that connection, I start to fantasize about getting a flash of divine inspiration and becoming a world famous (and unbelievably wealthy) author.

And then the very next thought is, “But I wouldn’t really want that.”  I’m thinking about the fact that she probably needs a security staff, she may have to be away from her family for press events, managing all that money would be so much trouble, and the pressure that it would be to have to constantly improve on the fantastic storytelling she’s already created.

Really?  Really?!?  Even in my fantasy about what kind of success I could achieve, I’m shooting myself in the foot.  I’m shifting my sights lower before I’ve even taken the first step.  I’m not saying that this mental sabotage is what’s going to make the difference between seeing me on the New York Times bestseller list and not, but it surely isn’t going to help my progress.

Frankly, if I end up creating the next Harry Potter or the next Twilight, I really, truly, sincerely believe I could overcome whatever downside there might be.  I think I’ll find the solution.  And if I can’t, I’ll hire someone else to do it.  (Duh.  That’s what all that money is FOR.)

If I set that kind of thinking aside, though, a truly scary thing happens — the next thought is, “Ok, now what?”  Well, now, I’d better get going.  Because if I can even imagine something like that for myself, and I don’t cut those thoughts short with my own fear of success, then there’s nothing to do next but to DO something.  Move forward.  Start down the path.  Make something happen.  Now the burden of failing or succeeding is on me — but only if I actually do something I can fail or succeed at.

Magic

A few years ago (pre-kids) I was talking to a friend about what I wanted in my life that I didn’t have — I struggled to come up with the right word, and finally settled on “magic”.  At which point she looked at me like I had, perhaps, lost track of reality.  I wasn’t talking about magic like Harry Potter:  wands and spells and potions (although, if there really is a Hogwarts out there somewhere, and I get my letter, I’m absolutely going).  I didn’t, at the time, really know how to explain what I meant.

I do now.  The kind of magic I wanted in my life is exactly what I have now — it’s the kind of magic you get watching your children play with a balloon or look at a ladybug or wake up Christmas morning.  It’s the kind of magic that you feel when you do something pretty ordinary and your kids are just amazed by it:  making cookies, drawing with chalk, fixing a favorite toy.

I get to have the privilege of discovering the wonder and magic of childhood all over again, by witnessing my children’s experiences.  I absolutely love it.  And there’s the feeling that I get when I look into their faces or hear them call for me or hold their hands.  If that isn’t magic, I don’t know what is.

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Freedom

As an American, I find it very strange that I’ve learned so much about freedom since moving to Austria.  Not in a “freedom of speech/religion/assembly/expression” kind of way, but freedom in the sense of personal liberation.  I don’t actually think it was important that I be in Austria to make these discoveries — I think I’ve had to be out of my comfort zone and stressed to a point of actually letting go of unimportant things (which is so very hard to do).  I think that could have happened almost anytime and almost anywhere, but for me, it happened to happen here.

Here, I’ve learned to accept that I’m going to get things wrong.  That was true at home, too, but I fought it.  At home, I tried to be “together”, I tried to be slick, I tried to do it all and look good doing it.  Here, I am so much more willing to accept that it’s a lost cause and just let go do the best I can in the moment.  I don’t know the convention of how things are done here.  I don’t know the logistics of how things are done here (I’ve finally figured out how to use the ATM — sorry, bankomat — so that I don’t have to put my card in two or three times in the course of a single transaction).  I don’t speak the language, so that’s like 1000 uncool points before I’ve even started to communicate with someone.

I’m having to find my own way of doing things here, too.  I have less help, more time alone with the kids, and everything I try to do is more of a challenge.  I’m having to focus on what is important — on what is really, truly, important to ME.  I’m having to discover my own priorities and determine the best way to execute them.  There isn’t even the illusion of enough time to do everything I want, go everywhere I want or do things as well as I want.  I just can’t.  In the acceptance of that comes the responsibility of determining what IS important and spending my time on that.  I’m learning to just do enough instead of trying to do it all.  I’m learning to just do well enough instead of trying to be perfect.  Everyone gets fed and cleaned and loved and read to.  Boo-boos get kissed.  The dog goes outside.  The house is not yet a toxic waste site.  Sounds good to me!

The pressures are different here, too.  The moms do things differently.  They worry so much less about their kids falling down and getting scraped or bruised or even breaking an arm.  They don’t worry about only introducing one food at a time to screen for allergies.  On the other hand, they bundle their children in the cold weather or the rain like they’re going to dissolve.  It just shows me that the things we choose to worry about are fairly arbitrary.  Things that would cause an American mother to gasp in horror would go unnoticed here, and things that would make an Austrian mother stare accusingly (they’re not so big on the gasping) would make an American mom scoff.  So, I worry less that my 3 year old isn’t potty trained and still drinks from a bottle, and I’m grateful my 10 month old doesn’t need to eat plain pureed chicken on the extremely remote possibility he has a poultry allergy.  People can stare and gasp all they like.

I’m accepting myself, too.  I’m good at some things, not at others.  I enjoy doing some things, and not others.  It doesn’t make me a bad mom, wife, daughter, sister or friend.  It just IS.  It doesn’t mean anything.  The distance from my structured environment at home is giving me permission to just be who I am.  I’m judging myself less and less for not being good enough, for not being slick enough, for not doing things right, for not doing enough, for not doing it all, perfectly, 100% of the time.  (I find I’m also judging others less for the same things.)

And all of that is ok.  In fact, it’s incredibly liberating.  I’ve never felt so divorced from my concept of what I ought to be doing or how things are supposed to happen.  In so many ways, the pressure is relieved — pressure I’ve felt my entire life, but most acutely since becoming a mother.  These concepts of perfection weren’t even mine, and I didn’t know.  For the first time, I’m experiencing the process of deciding what’s important and allowing myself to be just who I am.  And that isn’t sad, it’s wonderful.

Going to the movies

I love going to the movies.  Before kids, Dan & I went all the time.  It was one of my favorite leisure activities — we went for birthdays, anniversaries, with friends, or just because it was too hot to do anything else.  Sometimes we’d even stay and see a second movie after the first one ended (and that way, no one has to compromise — you both can see your first choice).  Ah, the good old days.  There aren’t a lot of things I really feel like I’m missing out on since becoming a parent, but the ease with which we used to go see movies is one of those things that I know we’ve lost for a while.

005Today, I went to the movies for the first time here in Austria — by myself.  It’s an “OV” (original voices) theater, so whatever American movies they play there are in English, which is a nice thing to have found, and it’s really close to our apartment (bonus!).  It was great, if different from what we’re used to at home.  First, you have to choose your seat when you purchase your ticket — they have assigned seating in the theater.  I didn’t have a preference, so I asked the ticket seller what her favorite was, and she chose a seat for me.  She chose me a seat in the third row of the balcony, right on the aisle, which was excellent.  Yep, in the BALCONY.  There was a whole upstairs seating section — very cool.  I guess partially because there is assigned seating, the theater itself was only opened up 7 minutes before the show started.  There’s no real need to open the theater earlier, because no one has to stake out a spot.  (It was a little weird just standing around in the lobby until the theater opened . . . and that was with only a dozen or so people attending this showing.  I imagine it would be very crowded and awkward if the theater were nearly full, although maybe then they’d open it sooner?)  Also, the theater wasn’t super air conditioned — they definitely have a/c, but it was still warm inside.  It was cool here today, so I wonder if it would be better or worse on a really hot day (maybe they didn’t have it on very much because it was cool out, or maybe that’s as much as it turns on and it would have been like watching Harry Potter in an oven if it had been 90 outside today).

There’s a concession stand, with popcorn, soda, nachos and candy, but with a few important differences.  First, no Cherry Coke (gasp, horror).  Second, no ice (boo).  Third, the cashier talks the customers out of the large size — talks them OUT of it.  The guy behind me in line wanted to order a large popcorn for his family to share, and the concession vendor girl told him that the large size was too big even for three people, “It’s much too big”, she said, “you’d be much better off with a medium”.  Then, he decided maybe he’d get two mediums for them all to share, and she talked him out of that.  Bizarre.  I’m guessing they don’t get bonuses for how many larges they sell.

But, it was great.  I got a Coke and a popcorn (not a large of either) and got to watch Harry Potter in 3-D in English.  It was a good time — I’ll definitely be going back.

35

Today is my thirty-fifth birthday.  It’s my first birthday living abroad, it’s my first birthday as a mom of two kids.  It’s been a great year (at least in part because I consider both of those major changes to be positive).  I’m really grateful to be here — to have this opportunity to live in Austria, to be the mom to two really wonderful kids, and to be alive in general.  Life is good.

I’m not sure if 35 feels old, but it certainly feels grown up.  (How many times in my life am I going to feel like *now* it’s time to be a grown up?  Does that ever stop happening?)  I feel like, as a thirty-five year old, I ought to be a little more put together — like maybe I ought to own more than one pair of pants that isn’t made of denim and that I ought to stop wearing athletic socks with absolutely every outfit.  I’ll work on that.  I have two kids, so that feels like I’ll get at least partial credit in the “grown up” category.

I really miss everyone at home, today in particular.  I miss seeing everyone for my birthday and getting to share the things that are the special way my family celebrates birthdays (like birthday soda and jell-o cake).  Days like this make me realize how great it was to live just an hour from my family, and how much I took that for granted when I had it.

I’ve really had a great day.  Dan and the boys helped me celebrate and feel festive (cake and ice cream and a great present), and my friend, Krishana, gave me the opportunity to go out and have dinner with Dan, just the two of us (the first time we’ve done that since we’ve been here).  It’s been a great day, and I’m so glad to be celebrating another birthday.

Benjamin goes to work

Benjamin has been asking for months to go to work with Dan.  We’ve stopped by a couple of times to visit, and I even dropped him off for a few hours once (so I could do his birthday shopping) but that isn’t what he wanted.  He wanted to go in with Dan — to get ready in the morning and head off on the train with his dad.

032This morning, that’s what we did.  He got up, had breakfast, got ready, packed his backpack and went to work.  As I understand it, they had a good time (even though B got bored pretty quickly, he was a good “helper” all morning).  For me, it was really weird.  The only time I’ve had such a long block of time without him was the one time Dan took him to the emergency room and I stayed home with Liam.  Nearly every day, Liam is awake during Benjamin’s nap, and I kept forgetting he wasn’t here and asleep in the other room — I kept shushing Liam while we were playing together.

I did enjoy my time with Liam.  He crawled all over and even cruised a little.  It was fun to be able to play with whatever toy he wanted without Benjamin determining what Liam is or isn’t allowed to play with.  But mostly, I missed him, a lot.  I’ve grown very used to spending my days with both of my kids.  Sometimes we play, sometimes we go out, sometimes he helps me with the chores, but I really enjoy our morning time, whatever we do with it.

(It might have been a bit of a nice break except for the fact that I couldn’t go out — we were supposed to have some guys from the power company come by this morning, although they didn’t.)

At lunch time, Dan brought him home.  Liam and I were both so happy to see him.  He had a nice time with Daddy at his work, but he was happy to be home, too.

When he starts school in September, this is what it will be like in the mornings, 5 days a week.  I am not prepared.  I think it will be what’s best for him, but I don’t think it’s what will be best for me.  If I were selfish, I wouldn’t send him to school — I don’t want to be without him.

The light is changing

I was outside this evening, around 6:00, and everything looked just a little bit off . . . like when it’s about to storm, but it wasn’t.  The sunlight was different — it was subtler.  Instead of bathing everything in bright light, it was just subdued enough to highlight and illuminate instead.

Fall is coming.  It’s still July.  I think we may have a long, dark winter ahead of us.  I see a time, in my very near future, where I am kicking myself and eating every word I said about the long, hot days we’ve had so far.

On the plus side, the kids are sleeping later, and we’re getting them to bed earlier.  And I love the fall, so if what we get is a long, drawn out period of beautiful light, warm days and cool nights, that would be absolutely fantastic.  Today was absolutely beautiful — it was about 70 degrees as a high, and very windy — I actually ordered a hot tea at Starbucks and drank it inside, because it was too cold and windy outside for me to really enjoy myself (although I did try for about 20 minutes).

It’s JULY.  Oh, dear.