Today I am grateful for: Aidy's outrageous and sometimes aggressive zeal for life

One of the actions I undertook to assuage my overwhelm this holiday season was some bold decluttering. While I know decluttering is such a catch-phrase…such a mainstay-to-the-point-of-enough-already of this modern age…it really does help me. Especially when I do it alone, without the rest of the family around to comment. Nora is the best at decluttering in our family. She will pick up, like, a textbook she is currently using, and be like, “I don’t think I need this anymore.” Aidy and J (sorry, J) are the worst. The other day as I was getting very down to business, tearing my way through bins of toys in the basement and clothes drawers, I discovered a random plastic container of about 15 CDs (no cases) under our bed. Scratched and of unknown origin. I should have dumped them in the garbage but instead I sighed and showed them to J, for fear if he found them there - in the garbage - we would have to have AN INTENSE DISCUSSION. “CDs!” he said. He proceeded to wipe them down with a microfiber cloth. I watched him do this while I continued my frenzied bout of purging and decided that I would not make any commentary on the irony.

The fact is that our house is fairly decluttered at this point, thanks to my practicing the skill over the years. But our attic, which includes both a finished and unfinished part becomes, of course, a hotbed of many undesired - but not enough that we are ready to get rid of them - things. So this morning I took a 15 minute break from work to start going through some of the problem areas. Sort of a paradise of organizing up there, really, if you like that sort of thing.

One of the first piles I came across were some loose drawings and notebooks of Aidy’s. I long ago swore off keeping every piece of kids’ artwork; every carefully penned note. But Aidy’s…hers are so good. It’s not just because she’s my youngest, although I think that’s part of it, as I cling to her childhood as long as possible. It’s also because she’s so incredibly passionate, both in the written and verbal forms of language. It’s like we had two rather Irish, self-contained children, and one final very Italian one. She has been trying to swear since she was a baby, devoid of the real words, so finding her own means of inflicting pain through poetry (two of my favorites: when she told Nora, who was carefully brushing her hair and must have caught a tangle, that, she “wished she had a real sister,” and the time when she informed Gabe that she was going to “turn him into a diaper and wear him.”)

On the flip side, her passion comes through as love, too, and it wraps me up and keeps me warm. Every night I tell the kids goodnight, and that I love them. And I know that Gabe and Nora love me, I do, so it doesn’t bother me in the slightest that their response is nearly always, “ok.” I get the impossibility of expressing oneself as a kid, as a teen. But Aidy’s! Aidy’s response is a torrent. “I love you SO MUCH that it’s as big as the WORLD you are the BEST MOM that ever lived, and I can’t believe YOU ARE MY MOM I hope you have the most amazing night of sleep, sweet dreams and everything you have ever wanted, I LOVE YOU I LOVE YOU MOMMY, goodnight.”

Her notes are similarly ardent, full of absolute joy and also bordering on melodrama, and she provides them regularly, often giving J and I a note at bedtime to inform us that we are the most wonderful parents and she loves “each and every day with us.” (Please note that she may or may not have also informed us on the very same day that she lives in the most boring house, so boring she might have to go to the hospital).

Today, while decluttering in the attic, trying to beat the clock and donate all the old things before new ones arrive, I stumbled upon some of her notes and stopped right there, reveling in their hilarity and heart. There are lots of things to get rid of, yes, and there are so very many I want to keep.

A post where I remind myself about the power of exercise, one of a few virtuous activities I plan to undertake this holiday season

This morning I attended a 6:30 am class at a gym I’ve been going to for years. I love this place. It is always challenging, and always feels like home. I’ve been attending 8 am or later classes lately, as the thought of getting up early to get somewhere, before the sun is up, is so unappealing. But it’s one of those things that seems unappealing, until you do it, when you realize it is so clearly the opposite. On the short drive there this morning, I saw all the people who’d gotten up at that hour to run or walk their dogs, or themselves, in the early morning cold air, before the day had gotten away from them, taking the opportunity with it, and I thought: YES! And I was glad I’d decided to join them in this ritual of exercise-first-thing (although to be clear I had a coffee before leaving the house - mandatory). The class was a strong dose of needed energy, complete with many squats and loud music and camaraderie.

Exercise is one of the things I decided I would do daily this holiday season, because the affect it has on the rest of my day is so clearly positive, and this is especially true when I do it in the morning. Not only does it make me feel physically and mentally better, but then I’m not thinking about how I wish I’d gotten it in over and over, as the hours slip away. Even a brisk dog walk fits the bill here. Something to ward me against that moment when I see the first holiday card come through our mail slot, and I am overjoyed to open it and see the smiling faces of people I love, before I think about the fact that I have not even begun the process of creating a holiday card, and wonder, should I even this year? and then decide yes, and then decide no, and then decide YES I WILL, and start browsing designs and die from decision fatigue before I’m five minutes in. But the thing is, the very great thing, is that I exercised, and those endorphins are still pumping, and I can check that accomplishment off my list, at least.