On any given day, I want time to speed up or slow down about
376 times. Fussy babies? Hurry
up, nap time. Everyone is hungry and
needs to be fed at the exact same moment?
Let’s fast forward thirty minutes
to when dinner (some moderate semblance of it) is on the table and everyone is
happy and busy eating. An hour of
bedtime routine and still everyone wide awake?
Come on, bedtime, I’m ready to
throw myself onto the couch and watch (sleep through) Homeland or Top Chef.
And then there are the moments were I want to time to stand
still.
You know the moments—those
beautiful, tiny, unexpected moments where
you step back and you see your children with new, clear eyes. Those moments where life, albeit briefly,
can’t get any better and see your kids for the beautiful little people they are
(or can be, in these moments).
I had one of those moments tonight. I’d told the biggies to get dressed for bed
about 14 times. They were stalling, and
if stalling were a sport, they’d be champions.
By a longshot. The babies were
all crying and frantically trying to climb up me, so I gave up and sat on the
living room floor so that they could climb all over me. Instead, they started hitting each other in
the face and fighting over who would get the prime spot on my lap. I was tired.
Really tired. And really ready
for everyone to march themselves to bed quickly and quietly.
And then it happened.
Mom, the biggies
said, we have to do our show for you
before bed. Dad, sit down right
there. You have to sit on that
couch. No, the OTHER couch. And watch us. And no talking at all. [Cue me talking to the babies and trying to
console them]. You have to watch us, Mom! No
talking! [Now cursing under my
breath because we’re long past bedtime.]
Me: Ok ok! Just do it already! Do the show!
Go! GO!!!
The show consisted of Lucy singing very energetically and
off key, while all three of the biggies swayed and sashayed wildly around the
living room. Emily and Molly alternated
jumping off Lucy’s back. Lucy continued
singing while directing the others, and their routine changed as they went
along. And then, amazingly, the babies
stopped fighting and got off my lap, and started dancing and clapping. All three were shaking their heads with
excitement, clapping, giggling, and joining in the fun.
I sucked in a deep breath between my teeth and paused. I paused the endless to-do list in my head, I
paused my frustration that no one was in bed, I paused my fatigue and I just
sat on the floor, watching them all: All six of my daughters dancing and
singing and clapping together. The
babies so thrilled to be with their big sisters. The biggies swooping down to include the
babies in their elaborate dance routine.
They were all so happy, and, even more than that, they were happy to be
dancing and singing together.
And so, for a few minutes, I completely abandoned my mission
to get them to sleep. I stopped what I
was doing and gave in the laughter and dancing.
I put music on my phone and we all danced and sang. I think the first song was something by Katy
Perry. And then it was that song
Stitches by someone I don’t know but the biggies love. I wanted to stop time and stay in that perfect
moment. And for a little while, I
did. We laughed. We danced.
Everyone was content. This—this moment—was
what life and parenthood was all about, right?
Eventually (ok, maybe ten minutes later), it was time to
turn the music off and get back to real time and the daily drudgery of the
bedtime routine. But that tiny,
beautiful moment gave me the boost I needed to carry me over the finish line of
a very long day. When I find those tiny,
beautiful moments, I cling to them. I
know they are a gift, a reminder to slow down.
To pause. To appreciate what’s
right in front of me. To be clear, I
know that on many days, finding the tiny, beautiful moments is like sifting
through mountains of dirt looking for tiny flecks of gold. Other days, there is an abundance of tiny,
beautiful moments to be thankful for. Every
day is different, and, if there’s one thing I’ve learned in parenting six kids
under eight, it’s that there is no predictable day. At all.
I can’t predict who will wake up happy or sick or mad or grumpy or
generous. The only thing I know is that each day, there will be a lot of crying
and schlepping and whining and pushing forward.
But there will also be those moments that take my breath away.
So each day, I try to look for them whenever I can. I pause when I say goodbye when I send the
biggies off to school each day. I hug
them hard and tight. I kiss the babies’
feet and make them laugh. I notice
Emily’s sparkling blue eyes and how they twinkle when she tells me a joke and I
laugh. I notice how Molly has suddenly
nailed how to be perfectly sarcastic. I
notice how Lucy is more poised than ever.
All those tiny moments make the other ones fade into the background, and
remind me to stay focused on the fact that the days are long but the years are
short. Those moments remind me that I’m
not just getting through the days but instead we’re living and loving and
growing with each day. So today, and
every day—especially the endlessly
long ones—I remind myself of this: there is no ordinary day. Only ordinary moments and tiny, beautiful
ones. Look for the tiny, beautiful
ones. They make all the ordinary ones worthwhile.
A recent beautiful moment: seeing my biggest girls walking and laughing arm in arm in the rain. |
Bedtime, what bedtime? Let's dance instead. |
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