Thursday, November 14, 2013

How Saints are Made

They say marriage is like a mirror, revealing things in each spouse’s character that each would rather not see. The challenge is to grow from these revelations, rather than bury them, run away or blame the other.

I believe Joe and I have grown leaps and bounds in our few years together, but never so much as in this past 16 months. If marriage is a mirror, parenthood is a magnifying mirror, making obvious even the tiniest imperfections.

We’ve both seen new sides of ourselves since Luca was born—good, bad and ugly.

It is so easy to get frustrated, to get angry.

I get frustrated when my son refuses to eat a nutritious and—I think—delicious meal I’ve spent my precious free time (his nap time) preparing.

I get frustrated when he treats his diaper change like torture, so I let him hang loose a while next to his toddler potty, only to see him pee on the floor—or worse, on his bed that I’ve just made with his last clean sheet. He loves going in his potty, announcing, “Brabo!” (bravo) and watching me dump the pee in the toilet. But he also loves watching his pee go anywhere in the house. Ugh.

I get frustrated when he just whines and whines and nothing makes him happy.

I get frustrated when it’s the middle of the night and he just. won’t. fall. asleep.

It is easy to discuss the happy side of parenthood, to declare some version of the cliché—with a smile—“parenting is the hardest job you’ll ever love.”

And those words are true for me, and probably for most who say them. But it is rare to understand someone else’s hard time, particularly if you don’t live through the details with them.

Before I had my own small child, I had no idea the depths of difficulty. I had no idea how my own character would be revealed and challenged.

Sometimes Joe and I wonder if parenthood is harder for us than others—if we are the only ones who feel trapped by our toddler’s strict nap and meal schedule. But I hear other parents talk, and I read blogs, and I watch comedy routines, and I realize we are not alone.

A mom of two small girls told me last year, when Luca was new, that she hadn’t had a chance to grow in her Christian faith since her first was born. She hadn’t had much time to read or focus on the spiritual.

Those words nagged at me for a few days until I realized why: She was wrong.

I normally don’t go around telling friends their personal reflections are flawed, but I couldn’t resist sharing what I saw in her.

It is difficult for any woman to find time for the kind of intentional personal growth she practiced before motherhood. But raising children is an opportunity for a practical crash course in developing the fruits of the Spirit: Love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness and self-control.

My friend had good days and bad days, of course, but she was much farther along in that crash course, and I only hoped I’d learn as well as she had. I decided to make those fruits my goal.

This is not easy, particularly when I’m exhausted and my toddler demands to be held while I am trying to make dinner for him before he completely loses it. And by demands, I mean holding and leaning on my legs in such a way that if I move, he will fall to the ground.

Luca has made five separate ER visits and had three hospitalizations, and those were some of the hardest concentrated times in my life. But during those extreme challenges, it was easy to be a "good" parent, to be patient, gentle and kind.

It’s so much harder when things are fine. When I struggle to fill increasingly cold days. When the thought of going to a playground again makes me cringe a little bit.

You can’t phone it in with parenthood, whether or not you work outside the home. There are no sick days. Even if you find healthy ways to take breaks from your kids, you are a parent every hour of the day. And night. Children demand 110 percent, and that's taxing for anyone.

In those moments when I feel so frustrated I think I might explode, parenthood shows me my need for God.

A friend facing an ongoing conflict at work recently reflected, “Any idiot can get through a crisis—adrenaline will take care of most of that. It's in the day-to-day that the saints are made.”

So. True.

Perhaps the hardest thing about parenthood is sacrifice in the little things, day to day. Daily doing something I don’t feel like doing. Reading that same book ten times in a row. Praying for strength to stay calm while telling Luca again not to bite me or pull my hair. Playing in the dusty sandbox because he asked me to work the rake while he shovels. Giving up my plan to exercise because he pooped and woke himself up early from his nap. Keeping my cool when he spits out blueberries on the beige carpet.

Some days I see these “inconveniences” as gifts, and I am in awe at this wonderful child. But I can’t be emotionally on every day. No one can, and no one should be expected to. I think it is OK to have those days when you'd rather do something else.

But I can’t stop expressing love to my child just because I woke up on the wrong side of the bed. I can’t stop changing diapers when I don’t feel like it. I can’t watch TV all day if I’m under the weather.

Of course it is healthy for parents to have outlets and hobbies apart from their brood, and of course it is healthy to take breaks, but even with those things in place, parenthood will bring you beyond what you can calmly handle on your own. It will reveal your selfishness and give you the chance to let your self-focus go, little by little.

In the midst of a rather controversial section of scripture discussing gender roles, the apostle Paul writes, “women will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety (1 Timothy 2:15).”

I don’t believe the author was talking literally about labor and delivery. I think he was talking about the much harder day in and day out work of raising children. I suspect the meaning is broader: At the time, women didn’t have careers or opportunities the way they do today, and fathers weren’t as involved in childrearing. I believe Paul's words apply to dads as well, and of course I don’t believe raising kids is the only way a women can grow and learn to rely on God—though it is one particularly intense opportunity to do so.

But just as the challenges of parenthood are far more acute than I’d anticipated, so is the love and the joy. The cliché is right.

I love watching my son learn the letter E and hearing him giggle uncontrollably at something unexpected. Feeling him cuddle up to me as he falls asleep. Seeing him get that spoon successfully from the bowl to his mouth. Listening to him make monkey noises. Hearing “Mama!” when he needs me.

I love that little man.

The thing about parenthood is that each moment—each breakthrough moment, each impossibly hard moment, each fun moment, each moment you lose your cool—is a gift.

A chance to become just a little bit more like a saint.

Monday, November 4, 2013

Franklin Covey Mom


At bedtime, after I’ve bathed and moisturized Luca, after I’ve read him his current favorite book four times, after he’s downed his sippy of non-dairy milk (“night night,” as he calls his drink), I lie on his floor-bound twin mattress and pretend to sleep as he shakes off the energy of the day and settles in for the night.
He romps around the room a bit—some nights that means emptying his sock or diaper drawer and announcing, “Sock!” “Diaper!”—and then, as he gets sleepy, he starts to roll around the bed and chatter.
New favorite toys.
“Bye, bye leab,” he said tonight, referring to the fallen leaves covering our housing area.
“Vvvvvvvv! Vvvvv! Beep beep!”
“Mmmmmeh,” he mooed from his downward dog pose, imitating the Korean onomatopoeia for a cow’s noise, part of a favorite book.
“Boom!” he cried, code for plopping down on his bed.
The chatter began to fade, and he spoke once more about the leaves. “Oh, leab,” he said softly. “Oh, leab.”
I'm not kidding; he absolutely loves leaves.
As I kept pretending to sleep, one eye peaking in a vain effort to protect myself from the inevitable head-butt to the cheekbone, I realized he was simply processing his day.
You know how some people can simply shut off the day and fall asleep when their head hits the pillow (ahem, Joe)? I am not one of those people, and apparently neither is Luca.
When I close my eyes at night, things I’ve seen, said or done dance around my brain. Especially television shows. If I’ve watched a show that is disturbing on some level, I have to sift through the images and language, allowing it to run through—and hopefully out of—my mind before I can fall asleep.
This nighttime reflection has been nagging at me for a few months; I have a growing sense of dissatisfaction with how I use my time. No, not the time I spend with Luca—I don’t want to change that.
This little man is way too much fun.
I mean when he’s asleep. After I’ve spent hours pouring myself out emotionally and physically, which is the nature of life as the primary caretaker of a toddler.
I suspect no one would blame me for using that precious naptime and post-bedtime to sit around and zone out. No one would blame me if I use that time to catch up with household duties before plopping on the couch to watch a mediocre TV show for a little while, or to browse Facebook.
It’s gotten harder to do much of anything else in my “free” time these days, now that Luca walks and communicates his preferences more clearly. It’s hard to explain exactly why that is, but with the joy of watching him learn comes a brand of emotional exhaustion I wasn’t expecting.
I had hoped I would have more time to exercise, to read and—especially—to write as Luca grew. I had hoped staying home would provide me the creative space to let my imagination flourish.
But it turns out imagination takes a back seat to endless household chores that seem to fill every single spare moment. It turns out imagination takes a back seat to that comfy couch and easy access to Netflix and Hulu.
Mothering is a lot of work. Babyhood and toddlerhood are demanding phases. It’s OK if I don’t accomplish anything on a personal level outside of my familial responsibilities, which are accomplishments in their own right.
True.
But.
Even though I’m tired and easily bogged down at home, I want to write. I want to read. I want to exercise. I want the things that float through my mind before I drift off to sleep to be constructive. Creative. Exciting.
If I want those things, emotional exhaustion is a hurdle to overcome. Household chores must be put in their place as tasks. I need to limit my Internet time.
I have to plan ahead to make room for creativity.
When I’ve worked in an office of any sort, I've been all about systems and efficiency. Outlook’s color-coded to-do list and calendar were my best friends. In my personal life, though, I prefer spontaneity and less pressure. I prefer getting things done when I feel like getting them done. I prefer deciding what to make for dinner based on what happens to be in the fridge. I write my to-dos on a dry-erase board or a random sticky note.
Today, I realized I need to Franklin Covey my personal life.
I need to set goals. Schedule the “big rocks” I want to accomplish before the less-important daily tasks that now consume my time. Figure out a central calendar system. Prioritize so I know what to do when Luca falls asleep, rather than defaulting to the old reliable remote control.
Today, I filled out November’s calendar with a menu of Luca-friendly dinners. I decided which days I should go to the Commissary. I broke this week’s naptimes into blocks of food preparation, exercise, writing and reading. I planned at least a small task for each evening. I scheduled time to respond to email and watch Parenthood.
I’m not sure how this will go. I’m sure I’ll need to make adjustments and be flexible within my plan.
But tonight, at least, my thoughts can be empowered when my head hits that pillow. Hopeful.

Sunday, August 11, 2013

The Changeover

It’s amazing how quickly a house looks soulless after its people leave.

The Foreign Service lifestyle is filled with farewells, and never is this more obvious than summer months here on our embassy housing compound in Seoul.

Friends pack up and leave, and almost immediately, the curtains come down. The furniture comes out. After a week or so, the family name on the sign out front is painted over—but not enough to completely hide it.

Workers go in and out over the next weeks, cleaning, updating, painting, replacing. Flipping for a new family. I’ve watched this happen to several friends’ houses over the last year and a half, and honestly, it is sad.

But quick change is how things work in the Foreign Service.

When we arrived in January 2012, several people told us they were “not worth getting to know” since they were leaving six months later. Funny enough, several of those people became our close friends.

One summer 2012 departee is someone I still consider one of the closest and best friends I made in Seoul: She was the friend I could call last minute to hang out; the one who talked me into watching the new Zac Efron movie and Titanic 4D with Korean subtitles. When she left shortly after Luca was born, I felt a little cheated.

But, you know what? She was worth getting to know. I’m so grateful our husbands’ assignments in Seoul overlapped, and I'm thrilled I'll get to see her again in D.C.

I don’t pass her house that often and I don’t know the family inside, so I still think of her and her husband when I see it. To me, it is still their house.

And I’m not alone in feeling this way about friends’ places. We stay attached for a while. One departing couple’s next-door neighbor (half-jokingly) swore to “hate the newcomers,” but just for a little bit.

“Oh, you moved into JBK’s house,” we would say to the new friendly young couple. “Big shoes to fill.”

Then, we became friends with the new couple. The house became their house.

Other houses—ones now filled with families in different life stages; people I haven’t met or connected with—are still, in my mind, the houses of friends who left. Across the street, it’s still Stephanie’s house.

Because Stephanie left a legacy of friendship with me. We took a million walks to the park with her little girls, and with Luca strapped on me. She joined in my excitement over Luca’s birth. She cried with me in the hospital—two different hospitals—when Luca was suffering. We celebrated Thanksgiving together.

But, unlike in most living situations, that legacy of friendship won’t stay in this place. It will travel with me to our next post. Any personal legacy left behind here lasts only as long as others stay. A “legend” is the person who used to cook amazing meat at Fleishfest a whole two years ago.

This week, we said goodbye to more good friends. The wife brought me meals after Luca’s birth and helped me during one of our hospital stays last winter. She was a friend who shared my joy in Luca’s milestones and then, more recently, her joy in her new baby girl. We commiserated over lack of sleep.

Her house is empty now; the curtains are gone. The sign awaits the light paint job that will halfway erase their last name.

Of course, with all the Foreign Service friends we’ve made, there is always the anticipation of reconnecting at some future post, or in D.C. We become a worldwide network of friends that is constantly changing, growing, moving.

After a few weeks, the sign in front of our friends’ place will be thoroughly painted a near-glowing bright white with a new name stenciled in black.

And that’s when things start to feel exciting: All the fresh signs with unfamiliar names. Potential friends.

We are sponsoring a family this year—making sure they have groceries, being friendly when they arrive—and when I checked to make sure their house was prepared, I felt a twinge of excitement. They will arrive in a few days, and for the first time, they will look around at each room, at the setting of what will be their life for the next couple years.

I think back to entering our own home for the first time that frozen January night, and I think ahead to entering new homes at future posts.

The excitement of new beginnings.

In about six months, our neighbors will see our house emptied, our sign painted. They will wonder who will move into the Kims’ place. Maybe our next-door neighbors will resent the newcomers, just for a minute.

Later, Joe, Luca and I will move into someone else’s place in some other city. And then again, I assume, a few years later. And so on. To me, the wonder of the unknown and ever-changing future sounds like fun. An adventure.

I guess the hellos—to new people and places—are why this lifestyle suits me, despite so many sad goodbyes.

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Becoming Food Allergy Mom: A Coconut Milk Experiment

Luca’s increased mobility and insatiable desire to explore his world have brought new stresses. In addition to the normal first-time-mom worries—that he’ll fall on something sharp or bonk his head—I’m obsessing about food.

Will someone leave a plate of veggies with Ranch dressing on a low coffee table at a party? Will a child drop cookie crumbs or Goldfish crackers at a playgroup? Will a parent or child offer to share a Gerber puff at the playground?

Now, I don’t have it nearly as bad as many mothers: Luca’s food allergies have shown no indication of causing anaphylaxis. Of course I watch for it when I introduce new foods, and I’m not going to give him peanuts to test it out at this point. The memory of Luca’s hospitalizations is still poignant; I remember well how horribly his skin can react.

Of course I hope he’ll grow out of his allergies. Of course I hope he can savor a real cookie someday. Drink real milk, even. Eat eggs.

But for now, I’m joining the hoards of Food Allergy Moms who seem more and more prevalent as the years pass. Who are hesitant about or avoid daycare or church nurseries. Who compulsively (and—I’m sure—awkwardly) pick up crumbs friends’ children have dropped.

Who search and search for substitutions to make sure their child gets enough vitamins while avoiding basic ingredients.

Since Luca turned one year old a few weeks ago, I’ve gotten more aggressive with trying new foods to be sure he gets the nutrition he needs. It’s a challenge. Luca gets rashy when he catches a cold, or when he sweats too much in the carseat (which is likely when it’s 90 degrees with 72% humidity), among the myriad reasons we don’t know. Food was clearly the trigger for his severe eczema breakouts last winter, but at this point, it’s hard to know whether his (mild) itchy rash comes from an addition to his diet or from a cold. Twice now I’ve suspected a food (chicken, then quinoa) only to find out Luca caught a cold. But, still, I tuck the food away for a later trial. Just in case.

Since cow’s milk is such an essential part of most toddlers’ diet, finding a suitable substitution is my current mission. As I google and read blogs and research products and talk about food trials with all my friends (who graciously listen), I realize I’m becoming that mom.

The Food Allergy Mom.

I can’t help it. And here’s where I’ve really crossed over: I made my own coconut milk.

Luca started with rice milk since he’d eaten rice with no problem, but it’s my goal to give him a combination of coconut milk and flax milk, since both are far more nutritious than just rice. We tried coconut and, success!! No issues.

Except for the fact that it is not easy to get good coconut milk here on a military base in Seoul. The Commissary only sells the canned (BPA-filled) kind you wouldn’t drink straight and a shelf-stable box of very sweetened vanilla So Delicious coconut.

And, honestly, I have concerns about some of the ingredients in the boxed coconut milk. While I research vendors who will ship shelf-stable milks to Diplomatic Post Office boxes, I figured I’d better at least try making my own. Here's how it went:

I drilled a hole in one of the eyes and let it drain, saving the water.
I put each coconut in a ziplock and got out the hammer.

Luca was confused about why I was hammering the brown ball. During the second coconut smashing, he giggled uncontrollably.


They really smashed beautifully.

Ahh, the fun part. Getting the meat out is no small chore, even with a pairing knife and veggie peeler. I had to stop and finish it the next day.

I put half the coconut meat and coconut water along with 2 cups boiling water in the blender...

...and the other half in the food processor, which leaked a lot.

I poured the results into a nutmilk bag in a pitcher, and squeezed the milk out of the bag.

Yum!

The pulp is currently drying in my oven to become coconut flour for baking!

Two coconuts made about a liter and a third.
My experiment was fun, and the resulting milk is yummy... but it separates (which I expected) and developed some chunks as it cooled (which I did not expect). I may blend it one more time tomorrow.

Scraping the meat, however, out took way too long for this to become a part of my routine. Unless I buy a special coconut-scraping tool and figure out why my milk is clumping, this will be Luca's one and only batch of homemade coconut milk.

Next up: homemade flax milk!

UPDATE in case you (or I) want to make this in the future: The next morning, the milk was separated into liquid and very solid. I put it in the blender, which helped, but the milk was way too thick to drink straight. I added water--enough to double the volume--and also added two tablespoons of good quality vanilla (one T per coconut). The result is delicious, and Luca likes it!

Monday, July 8, 2013

Luca's 돌 (Dol), In Pictures

In Korea, a first birthday is a huge deal and truly cause for celebration. Since Luca turns one this week, Joe's parents flew in from New York, and we threw a party with Luca's relatives. Here's how the day went:

Luca, dressed to impress, greeted relatives as they gathered at our house.


Charming the ladies


Luca loves his 할아버지 (grandfather)


The family enjoyed Sunday brunch at a restaurant on base.

Mama's hair is the best toy



Back at the Kim house, everything is set up: The table for the traditional dol ceremony, Luca's hanbok, presents and cake.
We played a slideshow of pictures from Luca's first year

Which item will Luca choose?




But the star of the show needed a nap, so the family spent time together talking, snacking and watching the kids play Wii.


When Luca woke up, I dressed him in his hanbok and showed him off to the waiting paparazzi.





In a dol ceremony, a baby chooses from items set before him, each representing something different: Luck, long life, wealth, intelligence, government service (I think?), and artistic talent. Traditionally, the ceremony is believed to foretell a baby's future, though of course we did it all in fun. Watch the video to see Luca's result!





After the dol, my smart and lucky Luca opened presents and played with the other kids.
Baby jewelry is the traditional dol gift

Fancy clothes never stop Luca from playing in his ball house




Particularly popular with the kids was a pop-up tunnel from Nana and Papa in California.
























Luca liked looking at his cake, but since he has food allergies, he got his own special cupcake, which he dismantled and ate.




I'll take two, thank you.


Everything is more fun to eat once it's been dissected.


After the party, Luca was thrilled to play with all the balloons. Happy birthday, Luca!!