Category Archives: Sent to Sydney

In the Room Where It’s Happening

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You got more than you gave/
And I wanted what I got
When you got skin in the game, you stay in the game
But you don’t get a win unless you play in the game…

This was not how I had pictured my Saturday morning.

The room around me was dark but for laser lights puncturing the black, bouncing around me on all sides. Music blasted from unseen speakers. Children darted about, including one of mine. He alternately stuck to my side and shot out himself, out of my line of vision then back into it again. We were walled in but surrounded by faces we knew, trapped but free.

It was…fun.

Birthday parties have, over the years, been some of the sources of my deepest identity crises, but these days they are more the sites of a decent time. And this one, on a grey Saturday morning amid the tourists and trappings of the city, was turning out better than I’d imagined. The Kid and I had dropped off Little Brother at a friend’s house and picked up that same friend’s brother, who came along with us. I managed to find a car park without coupling it to a nervous breakdown. We had entered the party on time. So far, so good. TK broke off from the group, wanting to check out the arcade games. We did, then I pulled him back for our first reality check/group activity: laser tag.

We listened to the instructions and the kids divided into teams. I went into the darkened room with him and the rest of them, passing on a vest of my own because I am a Dignified Adult (patent pending), and I figured I’d need to helicopter-parent TK without being encumbered by bulky outerwear. The game began.

A few minutes later it was done and we filed outside the room to check the scoreboard. No points on the board for us, but while I struggled not to hyperventilate due to sensory overload, TK grinned. The organisers suggested another round. A couple of the parents opted for vests this time. I hesitated…then grabbed one of my own. I chose to be on TK’s team.

Some of the kids saw me put on a vest and cheered, as did TK. I think it may be one of my favourite life moments.

For the next fifteen minutes, we all darted together. I shot and was shot at, by kids and other parents. People look different in the dark, when lit up only by lasers. When they’re having fun. When they’re…playing. TK and I stuck together and ventured apart. We were both in the game, on each other’s side.

This time, we got points on the board.

I had to pull TK away early, before arcade time, to get to his first tennis lesson. I expected a meltdown but didn’t get one. We got to the court and for thirty minutes, he smiled. He played, and I watched from my own spot on the sidelines.

Earlier in the week, I took LB and his friend to a school readiness program and for two hours, I hiked. I covered ground I never had before, pushed aside branches and gasped once at a snake that slithered away. I happened upon beaches that are only reachable by trail and gazed upon views you don’t see from the car.

There are some spots that can only be reached by the more arduous journey. But then…what a vista.

TK’s annual fight against school is weakening already this year. On Mondays, I pick him up early for speech therapy, and this week I crept in silently. These are the forays that you only “get” to make if you’re facing something out of the typical: a dentist appointment, a challenge, a diagnosis. There have been times when I wished I could be the parent who showed up at three o’clock every day along with all the others; the parent who dropped and ran at every party; the parent whose kid’s road didn’t have bumps in it to navigate.

But on Saturday, I played laser tag. And on Monday, I surprised my kid and was met with a grin that lit up the room just after I saw him bent over his work at the jelly bean table, his wrist working harder than the others because it was born a bit weaker, and it wasn’t about having to do anything. It was–it is becoming–about getting to.

Here We Go Again

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I’m writing this at our outdoor table while the boys, deprived of their devices all day, focus on iPads inside. It is a moment’s peace in between the moments of…life. Of waving to The Husband this morning from the driveway, the three of us in varying stages of anxiety (me: high; The Kid: mild; Little Brother: nonexistent), as he hopped into a hybrid Uber that fascinated TK and worried me. The car taking him to the airport for a nearly two-week trip back to America, a trip spent seeing family and friends but mostly working. And working on our future, at that. No pressure or anything.

I’m in between LB’s first day of school successfully completed and TK’s starting tomorrow. One precipice gently dismounted and another yet to come. After last year’s teacher debacle we must have been exhausted–well, by that and by the holiday we took afterward, #firstworldproblems–and we spent much of the summer not in the constant playdate mode I envisioned but more in hibernation, social events peppered in but more moments spent watching movies, sitting on the couch, and just staying home. I’m ready for that to change…and not.

I’ve found my expectations (definition: future disappointments) to be two-sided: on the one hand, that of the kids’ schools, they’re high. LB is at the same spot, in the same class, with the same teachers and the same best school friend. I’m a fan of same, even if it isn’t the card that’s been dealt most often. For his part, TK stands to gain a better teacher experience this year along with his same therapists at the same school.

On the other hand, we start the year without TH in his rightful place–with us–and my expectations for sanity are…LOW. Gone will be the early-morning hikes with my trek team, or the post-dinner zone-out while he rumbles with the boys. I’ll have the fleeting hours each week while the kids are at school to myself, with their own non-summer kind of worry mixed in, and no partner alongside me for support (ie, hearing my complaints).

We do have a hell of a security system, though. So there’s that.

On the flight back from our holiday, I watched Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again. My expectations were low–any film with an exclamation point in the title already feels too chipper for me on a good day, and especially on a flight that was delayed three hours. But I found myself grinning like an idiot through the whole thing, including the credits, and feeling like I had pulled something off, had stumbled upon a big secret. I think this is how it often works–low expectations leave space for surprise. I’m sure life would be handled best with this idea in mind, but it’s impossible not to think ahead, not to form opinions of how things should, and might, be.

Yesterday TH took the boys to a movie and I wandered around the mall, shopping and thinking about the talk I’m meant to give at a conference in April. I dutifully listened to my most inspirational songs and watched some riveting videos and pecked away at my phone as a few ideas scuttled through my brain. None of it felt particularly right. Last night, I went to the bathroom and glanced at TH’s deodorant can, and that’s when inspiration hit. I can’t explain it and I don’t know that I want to be able to. It’s equal parts nonsense and amazing, this life.

So between the alone hours and the chicken nugget/wine and cheese dinners that will mark our coming days, I’ll try not to expect much while secretly expecting the world, because that’s how it goes anyway. I’ll expect to lose my mind a little while also expecting TH to be returned to us safely. I’ll worry about the boys at school while expecting their days to be historically wonderful. I’ll wake up with four legs in my face and I’ll get the grey dyed out of my hair and I’ll operate partner-less yet not alone, expecting grace to show up in deodorant cans and friends, in kid jokes and solitude, in everything if I’ll just look.

It’s the only thing for which my expectations can never be too high. I mean, what else would show up, just as I’m finishing this, as Little Brother with his pants down to his knees, saying, “How’s it going out here, man?”

Been Here Long?

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You can’t experience grace until you’ve experienced yourself. –Paul Zahl

I have swum in a couple of oceans now, as well as a gulf and a few seas. I have lived on an island, in several states, and a couple of continents across two hemispheres. If finding myself were the goal, I have certainly been located by now. But it isn’t geographical wandering that has led to that discovery.

I have found myself, have learned myself, have known myself in the counselor’s chair, in the space between my children’s yelling and my exasperation, in the moments of deciding whether to pour another drink, in between the moves and the events. It’s the in between that is really everything.

I said yes to an invitation to join a team on a sixty-kilometre hike across Sydney in two months’ time, and my body is catching up with this decision and all it entails: early-morning alarms, chafed skin, blistered feet, aching muscles. And also: new friendships, unexpected strength, beach sunrises. I feel every step even as they all become a blur once the endpoint is reached, which is really just another starting line for the next outing.

The pain is intense and the views are incredible. This, I think, is life.

I don’t think I’d want to know the person I would have become if I’d gotten what I wanted, if I’d had the easy road: people who made excuses for me as easily as I made them for myself; parents who hired me a PR team rather than making me own my mistakes; marriage in my early twenties; a stationary existence. The flat path. Because it’s in the re-stationing, in the grappling that I have become and am becoming. Not the broad strokes or simple black and white, but the day-to-day: the blisters on feet and heart that come from messing up, from hangovers, from being forgiven, from coming up short and finding the enough elsewhere.

From learning how to breathe in a new way.

When The Husband and I visited before our move here, we drove by a car wash with a cafe attached. I could imagine the boys there: The Kid watching the cars move through their line, Little Brother beside him. Last weekend we sat in that spot, two years in, this car wash one of many landmarks now as familiar to them, to us, as any back where we were. These are the moments when knowing occurs: the moments between dirty and clean, which is to say, all of them.

On our most recent training hike we met in the dark and finished in the light. In those moments between dark and light, we walked and climbed and covered ground, and somehow this thing called sunrise, which is even assigned a definitive time down to the minute each day, it occurred while all that was happening. As if the sun isn’t always there shining, and we, the travelers, aren’t the ones moving, being brought closer to the light.

Cloudy Sunrises, Gap-Toothed Smiles, and Other Plot Twists We Didn’t Ask For

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The other night I had a dream that our family was packing up the house we’d lived in since the kids were born: the home they were brought to from the hospital, the one that contains a marking of their various heights through the years, the one in which they spent their childhoods making memories.

I woke up and realised this house doesn’t exist.

What a strange thing. I have a house like that, one that had a dent in the wall in the bedroom my sister and I shared for years where she threw herself on the bed and skidded across it, knocking her noggin into drywall. It’s the house where we bicycled from in the mornings and where we returned at sunset after hours spent roaming the neighbourhood. It has the pool where my sister gave me a scar on my forehead after a stainless steel bowl slipped from her grip when she was filling it and dumping water on me.

My kids don’t have that.

Sure, we have the house in Atlanta where they came as babies from the hospital. The Kid spent five years there and Little Brother, two. They now call it our “Holiday House” because (a) they are under the impression that we own more than one house and are, apparently, some kind of real estate moguls; and (2) they now associate it with vacations because, much like Carrie and her 73rd Street apartment on the penultimate episode of Sex and the City, “WE DON’T LIVE THERE ANYMORE.” This is a strange thing to me, and bordering on the unacceptable: my boys have lived in four houses over the past four years and will surely live in a different one after the current year.

It would be completely unacceptable were it not for the fact that we didn’t ask for this; we were pushed off this cliff by grace.

I mean, we’re not even a military family. We can’t justify this wandering by saying we’re serving our country. And it feels wrong, in some ways, like when I dropped TK off for his first day of daycare as a baby and came home to sob. But it feels less wrong when I watch them run down the beach. When I carry them through the waves, literal and figurative, of our new life. When I’m carried myself through them, because I know we wouldn’t be who we are now were it not for a grace that moves us all over the map and goes with us.

We have gained so much more than we have lost. In fact, I’m trying to remember (besides proximity to some family and friends, of course) if we’ve lost anything.

Well, TK has. Last week, he lost his fifth tooth. In many ways, though, it was like the first. It was the first one he trusted me enough to let me pull–and I could see the weighing of options, the trepidation in his eyes. (I wonder if I ever look at God like that. Of course I do.) It was also the first upper tooth, which means that his smile his now changed.

“You have a new smile!” I told him, and he considered this–he, so resistant to change, but also strangely attracted to new things, to growth. I relate. He’s been playing with the new space, and verifying that it will soon be occupied by a “grown-up tooth,” and this is only one of the million ways that he, that they, that life reminds me of what I already know but always forget: that the empty spots are places to be filled.

That “home” isn’t a house for us because it’s the four of us, this equal-sided square bouncing around the world and growing ever closer, ever tighter. Sometimes painfully so. (See: trips to the bathroom.) That so much of life is spent in the tension between old and new, in the old leaving and the new becoming old again and over and over it all goes. That my children are learning to let go, and embrace. And so am I. (It’s not the easiest exercise.)

That we have front-row seats to watch, to participate in, what grace is constantly doing: new creations.

It’s exhausting. And wonderful. And awful. And messy. Just like so much, if not all, of the real parts of life are: the “beautiful moments through the tears” that a friend just texted me; the sunrise I woke up early for that was covered by clouds–clouds that allowed just a few rays through; the pain and blood followed by a gap followed by a tooth.

Yesterday I took the boys to the beach and we chose a spot right in front of the junction of a tidal pool on one side, and the ocean on the other. The boys stepped gingerly into the tidal pool, complaining of the cold water and wanting to leave. After awhile, they wanted to get into the ocean. And they didn’t. I hiked one up on each hip and we made our way through the waves. They protested; TK in particular felt his growing weight slipping down on me and said to stop, to turn around. I put him down and asked him to trust me, then held out my hand and turned back to the waves, fully expecting to be packing it in and heading home within seconds.

Then I felt a small but growing hand in mine. I hiked him up again–it was easier, because we were now deeper–and we got past the breaking waves to the place where we could ride them. I think we’ll stay there awhile.

Shame, Shame, Know Your Name

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Last week I hauled the boys to an outdoor playdate near a pool. In between the splashing and sunburn came a moment that often accompanies social events: the flashes of experience I linger over later, the happenings I sit on and overanalyse. I’ve done this my whole life, because #socialanxiety and also plain old #anxiety and also #introversion and….I could go on. Now that I have kids, though, I’m afforded many more experiences to study and feelings to interpret. Now that I have a kid diagnosed on the spectrum I have even more. It almost seems like Someone is doing this on purpose to me, hitting me right where it hurts and making me deal with it.

At one point, The Kid asked if he could do a wee in the garden. A “bush wee” as we call it here–it’s a cute way of saying “piss outside.” And, here, “garden” is not a word to describe an English outdoor masterpiece but, rather, a yard. A patch of grass. Anyway, I figure a couple of the benefits of having boys are (1) The Husband has to take them to the bathroom when they need to go and he’s around; and (2) when those conditions are not met, outdoor wees are often permissible. Let’s be honest–they’re probably too permissible in my book, because I’m lazy and it’s easy. So TK and Little Brother are used to dropping trou all over the place: music festivals, kerbsides, once on the side of a highway…you get it.

This trou-dropping is not about being on the spectrum. If anything, it’s a product of the parent I’m becoming because of this foreign sojourn–the very opposite of the rule-prioritising oligarch I planned to be before life and grace intervened. It’s about Australia, not autism: they’ve been spraying their golden showers all over this gorgeous country for two years now. And people who clutch their pearls over this…test me as a symbol of something I’m not. I think it’s actually a pretty good screening process for potential friends: you react in horror to my kids relieving themselves outside, we probably won’t be besties (see also: shock over f-bombs, hangovers, talks about mental health, etc).

Anyway, TK asked permission to go outside, and I considered running him inside before imagining the trail of dripping pool water certain to accompany us no matter how much towelling off occurred. So I asked my friend, the host, if bush wees were allowed at her place, and she said they were. So he did. No harm, no foul.

A few minutes later, though, a scene occurred that has defined so much of the angst in my life and the reason why I relate so deeply to the title of Mindy Kaling’s first book: two of the moms there were huddled together in the pool, and one of them cast a glance my (and TK’s way).

RED ALERT TO MY SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS. I immediately felt my defences arise–on behalf of myself (my parenting, my personality, my very identity) and, especially, on behalf of TK. See, something often happens with people who aren’t around him much: there’s this thing they do, where they know something is “different” about him, and they stare. They take furtive glances; they study him surreptitiously. It’s creepy, and it’s common, and it annoys the shit out of me, and I often wonder if I’d do it myself if I were them, briefly, before I get back to eviscerating them in my head. On this particular occasion there were several glances and even instances of pointing out offences he’d committed (food dropped on the ground, for example; CALL THE F-ING POLICE). Both my anger and despondence were piqued.

A few minutes later, the boys none the wiser, we said our thank-yous and goodbyes and left. Cut to me on the car ride home, and for the next several hours (kidding, DAYS) analysing the whole thing.

A close friend who knows that I obsess over, well, everything, but especially how people treat TK, tells me that the differences that I think about people noticing are not actually that noticeable. I love her for this, because she means it, and because she loves TK, but she’s also around him a lot. Around us a lot. In other words, she would not have to enter a psychiatric facility if one of my kids pissed in her yard. And these are the people whose opinions should matter, right? The people who know us and love us?

Sounds like a great idea! TELL THAT TO MY EVER-WOUNDED PSYCHE. Because the truth is, there will always be a part of me that is operating from that raw, hurt place inside (my counsellor called it The Inner Child, yes I’ve seen some counsellors CAN YOU TELL) that the world damaged long ago and that is still struggling to recover from it. “The world” being, well, everyone in our history, reacting to everything about us that they notice: our size, our looks, our weird personalities. I’ve heard that there are a few rare people, Galinda-style, who sail through life without anything offensive in their natures drawing the attention of the world around them. But I think that, like unicorns and compassionate Trumps, these people don’t actually exist because none of us escapes childhood or adolescence fully unscathed. No, I think most of us–even (especially) the pearl-clutchers–come into adulthood with our factory settings switched to a default of “respond out of wounds.” Out of shame.

Ugh, shame. (noun) the painful feeling arising from the consciousness of something dishonorable, improper, ridiculous, etc., done by oneself or another. Yep, that pretty much covers it. Painful.

So whether you once farted in front of a group of people, or had a phase of really bad acne, or were just a didn’t-fit-in-anywhere outsider (hello from your friend me, who nailed the trifecta!), maybe you know something about this? Maybe you have it buried deep beneath layers of since-improved-to-acceptable behaviour/size/hairstyle. I don’t know, I’m not your counsellor (can you imagine? We’d just talk about me the whole time).

It’s there, though. And dealing with it is messy and involves lots of thinking and feeling and admitting and all kinds of other activities that cut into social media time and override filters. But dealing with it is the only thing that keeps us honest. It’s the only thing that keeps us real.

And I’m beginning to think that, inconveniently, it’s the only thing that keeps us from dumping it all over our kids.

On my best days, I examine. On my worst ones, I obsess. Most of the time I’m riding the wave between the two and trying not to screw my kids up too much, only too aware of how so much of their stuff coincides with mine in a way that feels targeted…almost as though Someone is doing this on purpose for me, hitting me right where it hurts and helping me deal with it.

The other night we watched The Greatest Showman for the thousandth time and TK, ever with his eye for/obsession with detail (wonder where he gets that from) asked about the men who burned down Barnum’s building and beat up his employees. “Why did they do that?” he asked, and we talked about how some people are afraid of what is different–of what they don’t know. I didn’t get into the subject of shame and how closely it’s connected with hate; I figure we’ll get to that. He kept asking questions until the next scene, when all those “different” people showed up in a bar. “Look! It’s the good people!” TK exclaimed.

We watched as these outcasts danced and sang–two things hard to do if you’re clinging to shame. “They’re dancing,” I told him. “And singing,” he replied, then sang along, the refrain of the outcasts who know their name, where they’re from, where they now belong.

“And we will come back home.”

All Things (Old and) New

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My phone sits in a bowl of rice on the kitchen counter right now, the product of it being soaked in a torrential downpour last night. It was our third New Year’s Eve in Sydney, but somehow also our first: for the past two years we have landed at the airport that morning, and jet lag kept us from staying awake for festivities. This year, though, our feet had been on terra firma for a good three days after a week in Hawaii. We were rested (somewhat) and ticketed, for a celebration with friends at the North Sydney pool to swim, drink cans of wine, and watch fireworks. So we did.

Several bouts of thunder and lightning led to several pool evacuations, during which we ducked under cover and/or headed to the indoor pool behind the stands where our belongings sat, getting drenched. Once the rain finally lifted, we returned to our seats to grab some food (wine cans) and assess the damage. While the band played a medley of Mamma Mia hits in the background, I surveyed my poor lifeless phone. Then I jumped into the pool with the boys and bobbed around to the sounds of “Waterloo.”

And now, the morning after, I’m tempted to assign a New Year’s-sized batch of meaning to the fact that this morning, I was forced to drink my coffee without checking Twitter, and instead watch the boys playing. I feel the familiar urge to check my phone, to grab it and place it on the bathroom counter while I shower, to press Play on a podcast so sounds can fill the silence. Each time, the urge gives way to the realisation that the only thing touching my phone for the next few hours will be rice.

I went on a run with an old iPod The Husband found, one full of infant songs that I’d bought when The Kid was fresh and new, and I downloaded my own stuff but set it to shuffle, which left me fast-forwarding to the former soundtrack of my days, passing through hits like “Mommy Train” and “I Have a Doll!”. It’s the same feeling I had when the boys asked to watch Fireman Sam the other day for the first time since we moved here two years (!) ago: a crystal-clear nostalgia that invades through memories, memories of TK being tiny and me being so tired and fearful and confused by new motherhood; memories of hot days spent pushing TK and Little Brother through our new suburb, ten thousand miles from our old one, in a season that should be winter but was somehow summer. Newness drenching all the memories that, because of the arrival of new years, are now old, but can still hit me with the force of having just occurred.

Time is such a weird thing.

Our last night in Hawaii, I stood on our hotel balcony, twenty-one floors up, and saw the city to my left full of lights and the ocean to my right, dark yet full of its own life. It reminded me of summer nights on the beaches where I grew up, sitting on different balconies looking at an ocean of a different name that somehow still connected to this one. The days of our lives have been likened to sands in an hourglass, but I think of them more like water, passing by us yet never lost, connecting where we were then to where we are now. My newborn is now a wobbly-toothed seven year old; his brother so much more than an anxiety-filled hope enlarging my belly. That night as I sat on the balcony, they were feet away inside, their exhaustion giving way to sleep while mine gave way to frustration and irritation and, as usual, anxiety. It was time to return home, and my vantage point gave me views east and west. Two directions, two homes, with us in the middle.

Two directions. Two homes. Two years. Two kids, who, despite my shortness of temper and regretful outbursts, greet each day as though it’s brand new–which it is, but I of course forget–a shiny thing full of possibility. And last night, those faces bookended mine, with TH beside us, as the fireworks we’ve missed the last two years exploded right before us. Those two small but growing faces resembled TK’s one Fourth of July while LB was three months out from his first appearance: lingering smiles and eyes full of wonder. My own eyes collected tears at the true wonder of it all: how a place, and people, can be old and new at the same time–how all the best ones are, their history surpassed only by their promise. How grace keeps transferring us from one fireworks show or ocean or home to another, all of them still somehow connected.

Do Not Be Afraid (To Look Like a Weirdo)

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If it’s possible to be self-aware to a fault, I would like to raise my hand for candidacy as president of that club. All my life I have worried, fretted, sweated over what people think of me; over how much space I’m taking up; over how I appear to the people around me. I’ve spent countless hours considering the impact of my words and actions on others (and, in an ironic twist, remaining completely oblivious in, doubtless, countless other situations).

Which is why this past hectic week has been such a gift to my fear-ravaged soul.

The boys each had their end of year/Christmas concerts with their schools: The Kid’s was an all-day affair last Thursday, beginning with a bus ride to a local school with a hired theatre where he and the rest of the students would perform both a matinee and evening performance of their choreographed and costumed dance, set to “The Final Countdown” by Europe. I remember running and spinning to this song in a past life, constant awareness of my “form” and endurance and energy level plaguing the course. This time, though, there was only him: TK blasting, as usual, through our expectations and crushing it onstage. His grin lit up the room. There were tears–and not just on my face. I sat by his kindy teacher from last year for both performances, and she brought her daughter–who had helped out last year–along. “I just love James,” the daughter told me, and the three of us matched TK’s grin as we watched him dance across that motherfucking stage like he owned it alongside his classmates. He was lit up like a Christmas tree by that incomparable smile of his, wobbly front tooth and all (though the sequins on his costume didn’t hurt either).

At the evening performance, his teacher brought him to me a couple of songs before they went on–apparently he’d gotten upset when he couldn’t locate us in the crowd–and I sat with him on the floor as we awaited his class’s turn. When that turn came, I returned to my seat beside his kindy teacher and waited. We wondered if he’d pull it off again, given the emotional obstacle he’d just endured and the exhaustion of such a full day. Then we watched–and embraced each other as he gave another knockout performance. He was rewarded with Oreo ice cream and an early exit to head home, where, after we put them to bed, a thought popped unbidden into my head: how boring it must be to have a “normal” child…

Enter Little Brother for his Monday morning preschool performance. He tossed his “shy/excited” smile across at The Husband and me, along with some exuberant waves, and launched into what can only be described as World’s Most Enthusiastic Performance. There was stomping, waving, dancing, grinning, singing. “We Mish You a Merry Christmas” was a highlight. Getting so many words wrong, so wonderfully, as he does (for example: sharp for him is shark–because, DUH, shark teeth are sharp). He bounced back to us afterward, red-faced and joyful and undeniably pleased with himself.

And I realised I don’t have “normal”–I have neurodivergent and neurotypical, but I also have quirky, for both, in spades. I have a wonderful lack of self-consciousness doubled and modelled to me. I have freedom times two, walking through the world, personified.

This is healing. It’s annoying, because it means my toes are constantly stepped on and my boobs constantly run into, but it is healing.

I have heat at Christmas time–have I mentioned that at all?–but, stepping out into it from LB’s concert, I have a counter-intuitive lightness along with the sweat and sun because I have a boy playing in that heat in his sunhat with his friends who bids me goodbye with a kiss and wave because he knows he is loved. I have a boy who waits for me as I take LB into his preschool and who, when I return to the car to take him to school, has left a map on my phone because he’s been traveling while I was gone. “Where have you been today?” I ask him, and see that this morning we get to talk about Italy, where–he already knows because he’s checked–they drive on the right side of the road. This is who they are, these unhurried souls who tell me things like “M’s my therapist because I have an apple brain” and “H’s feet are bigger than mine because he’s older,” without any, as yet, worry or concern about differences. How, exactly, do I bottle and extend and absorb that, please?

Before we left America, on our last Sunday before Christmas Sunday, our pastor-friend gave a sermon about the angel visiting Mary. The most outrageous thing that angel said? “Do not fear.” Then he named us, those sitting there that day, he named us knowing the things that we’re afraid of. I wept as he told us not to fear, knowing Sydney and goodbyes were on the horizon. But not yet knowing that concerts full of joy were too.

When we were in Tasmania a couple of months ago we entered a room in the museum that people were queued up for. A gradual approach revealed that it contained an interactive art installation–participants placed a mask over their faces and threw a china plate at a wall, allowing it to shatter and fall into a bin below.

I hesitated. There were people in line–they’d be watching. What if I did it wrong? What if I looked like a weirdo?

The desire to shatter dinnerware trumped the (ridiculous and impossible) possibility of “getting it wrong.” I popped the mask on and threw and heard the satisfying shatter. And my boys watched, cheering me on.

Yesterday I was tired and sore and sweaty after a marathon Monday, and when the boys and I stumbled in at 6 pm all I wanted was a shower. So, while our takeaway dinner sat on the counter and they played with cars on the floor, I absconded to my bathroom and jumped into the lukewarm water. Because–and I may not have mentioned this–for all our new house does have, it does not contain a single bathtub. So I stood–STOOD!–and let the water run over me. Soon enough, naturally, I heard my name yelled out, followed by one set of feet running toward me. LB spotted me in the shower and, in a flash, was naked, climbing in with me. A minute later, in came TK–same protocol. I remained there, the pain of being a woman radiating through my lower back and abdomen and legs, as these two creatures stood beside me, unabashedly hogging the water and unselfconsciously naked beside their mom. This is probably inappropriate, I thought. And I don’t give a shit. “HOTTER!” screeched TK, and the water kept flowing, running down the three of us like a baptism.

Here It Is

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Yesterday was The Kid’s birthday, capping off a ten-day celebration that started on the 1st and would, were he to choose, still be going on. He woke up to balloons scattered throughout his and Little Brother’s room–both of them bounding up the stairs to announce, “Guess what?! There are balloons all over our room!” (yes, just like every year)–and a donut breakfast replete with Cars candle. I took more of those donuts in at the close of the school day and his class sang happy birthday to him while he grinned so hard I think his face stretched a bit.

We went to therapy afterward, because what kid doesn’t want that for their birthday, where we heard that he’s progressing so well that his sessions will be scaled back considerably next year, as will his school shadowing. Then we came home to a takeaway dinner with Oreo mousse dessert included. He fell asleep upon a pillow of questions as usual.

Meanwhile, I headed upstairs feeling like a Grade A asshole as usual.

It’s a broken record that I keep playing anyway: I want to be more patient. I want to answer questions enthusiastically and winsomely and in a way that encourages their curiosity. I want to stop, when they ask questions, picturing that kid at the beginning of Home Alone who follows the van driver around with queries until he’s told to get lost. I want to stop saying “because that’s the way it works.”

Christmas edition: I want to slow down. I want to stop transforming what should be a season of rest into a season of constant doing, or at least stop buying into a culture that does that. I want to stop turning everything–including viewing my favourite holiday movies–into a To Do List. I want to be still.

Meanwhile, the dining room table is covered with chocolate and cookies and Christmas cards that I will stand over TK and beg him to sign so that people will feel appreciated, dammit.

I remember one winter in New York, when I trudged up the steps near 42nd Street and 2nd Avenue toward Tudor City and the preschool there, where I was due to give a talk about teeth to the kids. Once I emerged on level ground, I saw the snow that had been my nemesis on the stairs–but here it was carpet, perfect and white and still falling in flakes. It felt like I’d been given a glimpse into a dream, into a scene to which I alone was privy in this moment. It was quiet, still, magical. Another world.

I want to see Christmas like that. But it’s SO HOT HERE.

And this is the deal–this weighing of the demands and realities of life, this day-after-the-birthday depression alongside beginning-of-Advent joy. The difference between complaining and recognising–recognising that it sucks that I won’t see my parents and sister this Christmas for the first time in years. That I won’t laugh with my cousins when the uncles make wonderfully inappropriate jokes. That I won’t see the marathon of A Christmas Story on TBS.

Unless they show it in Hawaii, of course. Because that is where I’ll be–poor little me–alongside my three male companions. It’s not a shitty deal, but it’s also not everything. I’m allowing myself a little space for the parts that are missing.

This morning my run was short. Because heat. But instead of turning around, I kept walking: over the bridge, down the stairs, and through the woods (“bush” here) to a private beach at the beginning of a hiking trail. I stood in front of the water, looking out for snakes, and felt it–what I had felt in Tudor City, but now years later and dozens of degrees warmer–the sense that I had been brought here. Led here by a love, a grace, that wanted to get me alone to show me something. To show me the magic that can happen in snowstorms and on beaches, in New York and in Australia, after Christmas and during Advent. The magic that has a name–Grace–that leads, and carries, us through hospitals and diagnoses and heat and cold and birthdays and day-after-birthdays and Christmas Day and Boxing Day and across bridges and past snakes (I assume they were there, hiding) and through days in which we are assholes and days in which we are…smaller assholes?…and through everything to moments like this: scenes of stillness and quiet, Nativities and the like, where we are singled out and loved and reminded that it’s not about the cards we make or the surprises we pull off or us at all, really. Advent is bigger, because grace is.

Anne Lamott writes, “This is how most of us are–stripped down to the bone, living along a thin sliver of what we can bear and control, until life or a friend or disaster nudges us into baby steps of expansion. We’re all both irritating and a comfort, our insides both hard and gentle, our hearts both atrophied and pure.” I’ll try to remember this tonight when the kids ask me a hundred questions starting with “Why?”–seriously, sometimes they sit on the toilet and just say “Why” and don’t even have a question prepared; I think they like saying it for the hell of it–and I struggle to maintain my sanity. I’ll remember what my friend CR said, that one of her Advent words is expansion, and that my kids sure do love to expand me–always have–and, mercifully, so does grace, which holds them and me both.

Here It Comes

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photo credit: RH

I should have known to turn around–and part of me did at least, as I watched car after car head the wrong way down the one-way slip near our house. One of them even approached me with a lowered window in the driving rain, its owner attempting to say something as I angrily drove past all the people breaking the rules on this dreary morning.

As we approached the curve ahead, the water’s depth grew, and I finally saw what was redirecting traffic: a fallen tree at the top of the hill. I pointed it out to the boys, who responded with approximately seven thousand questions (most beginning with Why), and turned around myself. That day would go on to be one of the stormiest in Sydney’s recent history, with mass erosion on the beachfronts and flooding of businesses and homes.

And the thing is, we could see it coming. The weather reports didn’t forget to warn us, didn’t neglect to recognise that a storm was on its way. There are just some times when preparations are in vain, when you can’t do anything until after the storm hits.

This blog used to be graced by a header photo of me and a nearly-two-year-old version of The Kid, sitting on the beach in Seaside, Florida, he with his characteristic pre-surgical head tilt and I with a beer on the other side of me. We were facing the water, its waves lapping before us, while a collection of dark grey clouds loomed above and ahead of us. I took it a bit literally, knowing as I did that TK’s surgery was approaching and that he should really be talking by then. I hoped those clouds didn’t include another chemical pregnancy and setback to our hoped-for-family of four. My second grandmother had just passed away, and those clouds carried grief within their billows. On the beach that day, though, all we could do was wait: wait for the storm to hit, then pass.

This year in Sydney has been more of Real Life. Gone was the idyllic kindergarten year for TK, with its constant triumphs and perfect teacher. His treasured therapist moved on, and we approached his Year One hesitantly. So much change, again. The year brought teacher woes but, still, victories. Another wonderful therapist. Some exclusions, as is typical with age, but new friends in his circle as well. New ones in mine too, more Fridays full of playdates and champagnes, more hangovers and wondering over drinking habits, more weight gained as comfort grew. A new church after a sabbatical. Another new house, dammit.

We’re rounding the corner on our second year here, approaching our third, and besides the house, we’ve capped it off in our traditional way, with LB’s and TK’s birthday parties. TK’s was this past weekend, in the house we just left: empty of furniture but full of people; a bounce house out front and water games in the back and beer and bubbles inside. This year has both flown by and felt like a marathon. It’s had more cloudy days, metaphorically speaking, but deeper and fuller ones. More serious talks over the wine glasses–but serious talks are my favourite kind–the ones that hold both laughter and tears are really the only ones worth having, I think.

I didn’t see TK or LB for most of the party–they were busy running around with their friends. Last year, when everyone started singing to TK, he hilariously ran around the corner to avoid the attention. This time, he merely covered his face partially with his arm, not enough, though, to hide the grin that stretched across his features. He clung to me, but loosely. He has come so fucking far.

I’m in awe of this boy who has undergone multiple knives, countless waiting rooms, MRI machines and offices; who has moved across the world and through three houses, who sees the world through lenses I’ll never fully have and deals with obstacles I’ll never fully understand and rises to meet every challenge in ways I’ll never fully know. I’m in awe of his brother, who waits patiently for his brother in waiting rooms and cars, who repeats himself when TK doesn’t hear him the first time and asks TK to repeat himself when he doesn’t understand (“I don’t know what you’re saying, buddy”), who cracks jokes with an ability beyond his years. I’m in awe of their dad, whom they recently have taken to calling Jason, and how he’s led us, because of his hard work and irreplacability, to this new home, to three houses, each better in some way than the last, to views I never imagined. I’m in awe of the grace that has been in charge the whole time, grey clouds and sun, storms and their aftermaths.

I’m tired because we just moved and because my stomach is cramping with a virus TK likely passed onto me. I’m emotional because it’s the Christmas season and with the hot weather here, I’m playing carols nonstop to make me remember. I’m reflective because it’s the end of another year here–another year away from family and so many friends, and another year embedded among more friends. Also, I have to pee and I’m holding it in, and I’m trying to avoid unpacking. There’s a lot going on.

On TK’s trip to the art gallery a few weeks ago, I was drawn to a colourful painting and read the card beside it, which described the artist’s “theory of colour harmonisation based on analogies between colours of the spectrum and notes of the musical scale.” Which, to me, is a fancy way of saying that there harmony exists because of the differences–in colours, in notes, in people–not in spite of them. Spectrum is obviously a fraught word for me but I often forget how there are so many different examples of it around us. As one of my favourite, yet somehow also strangely terrible in hindsight, Christmas movies might say (paraphrase): spectrums actually are all around us.

This is good news for me as I slow to a walk, stomach cramping, around the harbour behind our (new, again) house and see some clouds gathering to the west. There could be a storm coming: in my bathroom? In the sky? In life? But once you emerge on the other side of enough storms, you develop this weird ability…to see past them.

Removing

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This year, we will celebrate Thanksgiving by moving.

Specifically, on Thursday, packers will enter our home and start boxing up our possessions. There will be no turkey in the oven; by the end of the day there won’t even be forks with which to eat. We’ll spend the next few days in the in-between, split between two houses much like we’re already split between two countries. We’ll dine on takeaway and pull our clothes out of suitcases, and I’ll grow increasingly anxious and unsettled, and we’ll get a key over the weekend to start hauling some stuff over, and then on Monday–traditionally the busiest (and usually the worst) day of the week–movers will load up their truck with all those boxes and take them to our new location.

Except they aren’t called movers here. They’re called removalists. Which is apt, I think, being that what they do is remove things from your home. Unpacking those things and making their new environment a home? That’s up to us.

And we’ve done that here, twice. Two houses, each holding our family for a year. Each with its own view and features and advantages and disadvantages. I rejected this new house the first time I saw it, The Kid and Little Brother in tow, because I couldn’t see us there. Another house was higher on my list, a smaller and more traditional (less modern) one, with a turquoise backsplash that reminded me of our Atlanta home. I clung to that detail while this new, polished, marble-filled house imposed before me. I looked at the bidet and the sharp-edged stairs and the (I KNOW) indoor pool and shook my head. Didn’t suit us. Weeks later and still without options, The Husband and I took another look. This time, it suited us. Funny how things change.

And now, I’m imagining us there. I’m browsing rugs on the internet and placing wall hangings in my mind. I’m arranging furniture and envisioning dinners with friends. This morning, I took a hike.

After dropping LB and then TK off at school, I hoofed it to the new house to map out the walk from TK’s school. On the way there, I saw a path with a sign marking its entrance: path to beach. A few minutes later, I found myself on a tiny beach in front of a harbour full of boats. I gazed across at the restaurants we’ve already frequented, a short walk away. I gazed upward and saw our new house on the hill. I imagined the four of us on this beach, swimming and building castles. Right below our house. Suddenly moving didn’t seem so burdensome.

I miss turkey. I miss the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade and the Westminster Dog Show. I miss wine on the couch with my sister and sarcastic comments from my dad and letting my mom clean everything up (kidding. Or not.). I miss the temperature dropping and Christmas creeping in, slowly, until the day after Thanksgiving when it barges through completely. I miss shorter days and dark, sacred nights around the holidays. I miss not moving every year. New is hard, worrisome, and often defeating.

But maybe I need to be defeated, annually it seems? Because there is also this: TK delivering speeches to his class. LB showing me rugby moves. TK’s therapists telling me they’ll be fading out of school completely in the next year. LB singing me songs from the toilet. Both of them running off to join their friends at school and birthday parties and on beaches. There is this picking up–this removal–and dropping back down to somewhere different, where new life is to be found. Life I would never have sought out of my own, as I like to stay still thank you very much.

The other day I was walking home (to our current one, anyway) after a different hike. I spotted a snake in the tree in front of the house and snapped a quick photo of it, then ran inside to tell TH. He spent the next few minutes on his phone, researching the type and danger of the animal. Turned out it could either be very poisonous or completely safe, based on some colouring patterns that we weren’t willing to venture close enough to the creature to see. Over the next few days, the snake continued to hang in the tree, unmoving. We reasoned that it had died there. But not other creatures came to pick at its remains. Could it be…? A few days later, I noticed it lying on the ground in exactly the same position it had been in the tree. Plastic. The damn thing was a toy. It had been harmless the whole time.

Much of what I’ve feared in life, what I’ve obsessed over and worried about, has been, in the end, harmless. Some of it has not. In this case, TH simply tossed the thing into the trash with all of the others things we’re letting go of as we re-move yet again to a new view, together.