Search results for 'birthday'

Happy half birthday.

24 Apr

Today, my son turned six months old.

His half birthday.

I had such a hard time finding the words that I wanted to use to express how I am feeling. I want to do him justice. But these six months, man,

they’ve changed my entire life.

And without a doubt, this little (huge) guy has changed my life for the better

and for good.

I look back to the post I wrote for my daughter’s half birthday, three and a half years ago, and I am such a different person now. I am no longer a new mom. I don’t mark every milestone as fastidiously. I don’t plan princess parties to mark each month’s occasion.

But I love no less.

No less at all.

So in thinking, this is what I want to say about my son and his half birthday:

There’s this thing that I do with my daughter.

It’s like when I grab her hand from the driver’s seat in my car,

but even more powerful.

I hug her, hold her tight, breathe her in, and all of a sudden, the rest of the universe disappears.

I enter a new place.

This place is home to me. It is my place in this world, where I feel most at peace and most right.

When it comes to my son, the second child,

I feel as though I haven’t fallen prey to many of the common stereotypes. For instance, I still take a boat load of pictures of him, I still am tickled by each new thing he learns or does, I still honor his schedule,

but I realized, just yesterday, that I had yet to create a place in the world for just us.

I tested it.

It was in the middle of the day, right before we were set to pick up my daughter from school. And we weren’t busy playing on the floor or wrestling with a bottle. I was holding him and talking to him and all of a sudden, the urge to hold him close came over me.

And so I did.

And just like that,

home.

My place.

It is my place to be their mom.

These six months have been the hardest of my life, but not at all because of my son. His presence has brought me such joy.

He has blue eyes and strawberry blonde hair and smiles coyly, playing games already.

He sits with great facility, rolls all around, giggles at his sister, and on this past Easter Sunday, squealed with delight while eating smoked pork butt.

He is gentle. He is soft. He is sweet. He is round.

He is home.

And so while I may be in a new place, it is a place better than I could have ever imagined. I love my family in a way that I never thought possible.

And even though it’s been hard,

even though a lot of crap has happened,

I feel so blessed,

so lucky,

that I get to call them mine.

Scenes from The Bean/Happy Birthday, Twin!

11 Apr

So, I’ve been keeping a bit of a secret from you.

Actually, it’s kind of big…

(…at least in this land….the Land of Mom, that is.)

2 weeks ago, I spent my first weekend away WOB (without babe).

It’s taken me this long to share because

a) I had to find the right words

b) I had to process all that it meant to me

c) I have been terribly homesick for the weekend, and I was not yet ready to tap into all of the emotions that came along with it

d) I had many missed baby hugs to make up for

So, let’s start with a little question:

You have a baby, you spend every moment with her (save a few 8-10 hour stretches) for 2 weeks shy of 2 years. It’s time to leave her for the very first time. Where do you go?

I know what you’re thinking.

Duh! So obvious! (In the words of my girl, A,) Obviduh! You go see Twin!

So, after months of planning, (with a few moments of agonizing sprinkled in there) and a six hour train ride,

the husband and I arrived in Boston,

and, more specifically, into the arms of Twinny and Go Go.

It was perfection.

It was so us;

Wandering through Harvard Square, arm-in-arm;

Sharing bites of Grape Nuts Ice Cream and Anadama Bread

and sips of sparkling sake and gourmet hot cocoa;

Lingering in the Poetry and Children’s Books sections of the book store, reading about Haiku and Miro and Eric Carle;

Midnight dance parties and morning ebelskivers;

Our weekend meant so much to us. To all of us.

Our weekend made me feel light

and made me feel happy

and made me feel proud.

But, there’s only so much I can say in words.

So, here they are; Some Scenes from The Bean (and by scenes, I mean iPhone pictures of the food we ate…because that’s what you peeps really care about, right?!):

When I say that our weekend was delicious, I am not just referring to all of the sushi and onion rings and burgers and treats we indulged in during our stay. They were all great, yes, but nothing compared to the pure bliss of 3 solid days with my Twin.

And while it was hard for me to be apart from my little girl

(I missed a whole day of her life,

as that Saturday was the very first and only day of her existence that I missed seeing her wake up in the morning. It was weird, I tell you.)

it was also important.

Important for us (relationship us)

important for us (friendship us)

important for us (Twinship us)

and important for me.

Being a mother (for me) has meant giving all of myself to my little mini. But, in doing that,

in living the life of my dreams,

I lost some of my independent self along the way.

From the moment I became pregnant, my life was lo longer my own. Everything about me began to revolve around my daughter.

And so, our trip to Boston was rejuvenating. It was re-me-venating.

It was just what we needed.

And on that note, I would like to take this opportunity to thank the woman who was not only the Hostess with the Mostest,

but who, in the past 7 years of our Twinship,

has taught me what it means to be a sister, a friend and a golden, genuine, top knotch human being.

Happy Birthday, to my girl, way up Nahth.

I hope that you know how much better you’ve made my life

just by being in it.

I love you and am honored today, and always, to call you my twin.

Happy birthday, Happy Everything,

Happiness Always.

 

 

Speaking of birthdays,

22 Apr

I have yet to share the details of Birthdaypalooza,

(which, of course, included lots of kisses and lots and lots of cake. And cupcakes.)

like the fact that we spent my birthday weekend in New York City.

It was magic.

Or, as some may say,

it was the icing on the cupcake.

It was the perfect day.

This year, my birthday meant strolling through Central Park with a peaceful sleeping girl nestled into the nook made by my husband’s arms.

It meant having an occasion to point and shout, “Follow that bird!”

It meant eating an ice cream sundae, smothered in malt balls and fudge. At brunch.

It meant getting a t-shirt for my baby, and then a matching t-shirt for her Bitty Baby. And then the matching t-shirt for myself.

It meant snapping photo after photo of my parents and my daughter smiling at one another.

It meant feeling a bit old, and then being mistaken for the “big sister” a moment later.

It meant watching my girl feed herself my freshly made tomato basil spaghetti by the handful and then letting her hug with me with red, saucy paws.

It meant hearing my daugher learn 3 new words in one day.

It meant spotting feathers.

It meant dancing on a giant piano.

It meant everything.

On my daughter’s Birthday,

22 Apr

I expected to take her to the zoo. Or to a kiddie theme park. Or to a parade, in her honor.

I expected to dress her in a tutu.

I expected to eat cake for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

But, my daughter’s birthday was the day of the first Passover Seder.

So, on my daughter’s birthday, we visited my parents to help them cook for 37 people,

and ended up eating Matzohball soup with my mom and dad, Mommom and Aunt,

while sitting on the floor,

atop an old blanket that was woven by my great-great-Aunt.

All 6 of us, sitting on that old blanket, laughing and loving.

I guess that says it all about the fabric of our family.

Not what I expected out of my daughter’s birthday.

Oh, but we did manage to eat cake for breakfast, lunch and dinner.

So, I guess it was a little of what I expected. And so much more.

Birthdaypalooza

9 Apr

I may have mentioned that my baby girl and I have birthdays exactly one week apart.

In fact, my mom and I were both given the same due date when we were pregnant.

My little one just happened to decide to stick around in the womb for an extra week, so she was born at 40 weeks exactly. She had to make a grand entrance, after all.

And so, this weekend is the start of our week long celebration.

You know how we feel about birthdays in this family.

What I’m trying is to say is,

cue the marching band,

strike up the drums,

call your favorite Princess

and break out your tutus,

because Birthdaypalooza 2011 has commenced.

And,

go!

far more importantly, happy 1/2 birthday,

11 Oct

dear Twin!!!

Meet you here,

for tapas, in 10!

 

Oh, and save room to pop into here

for dessert. Or, we can make them sing to us over brownie sundaes at Hard Rock again. Totally up to you.

As long as we end our night on the big red couches in front of this

Deal? Deal.

Besos, mi amor!

You know you love me, xoxo, tapas girl.

Happy 1/2 Birthday,

11 Oct

To Me!!

Is it wrong for me to say that?

My Pop Pop said it with a voice-mail message;

My sister said it with a Facebook post;

My mom said it with a phone-call;

but, my husband’s way of saying it took the cake..

or….

cookie.

On my 1/2 birthday last year, I came home to a fantastic smelling house,

and this

little masterpiece, sitting on my kitchen counter.

The photo is backwards, because I didn’t have a camera handy, and I was 3 months pregnant, and a trifle lazy, so I snapped this shot with my good ol’ PhotoBooth.

On my 1/2 birthday last year, I couldn’t believe that I would be meeting my daughter in a mere 6 months.

Actually, on my 1/2 birthday last year, I didn’t yet know that I was having a daughter. Although, I kinda already did.

On my 1/2 birthday last year, I was still sleeping through the night.

On my 1/2 birthday last year, I did not yet know that I would soon be meeting my best friend, and that in the span of mere months, my heart would grow larger than I could have ever, ever imagined.

 

On my 1/2 birthday this year, I am grasping onto time, as it flies by me, too too quickly.

And so, in the 365 days that have passed since the last time the calendar read October 11,

so much has changed;

I became a mommy,

and the world is a whole new place.

Yet, I’m happy to know that some things have stayed the same.

You see, when I came home today,

my house had a familiar, fantastic aroma,

as my husband surprised me with a piping hot plate of Tollhouse cookies.

Yes, half birthdays are pretty sweet,

but they’re even sweeter when served with chocolate chips.

 

Beauty and the Birthday Cake

26 Sep

Thank you, to the very special reader and friend,

who alerted me to the Food Network cake baking challenge this evening.

The theme?

Beauty and the Beast.

I may have a certain affinity for this very special Princess.

And let me tell you,

these cakes were more masterpiece than they were confection–they were unreal.

My apologies for the quality of these images. This is what happens when you try to snap screen shots from your TV with a dinky little Blackberry camera. Just trust me on this. The cakes were outrageous.

I’m already obsessing over how I can secure one of these bad boys for the baby’s birthday.

Good thing I still have 6 2/3 months to try!

Happy Birthday to Us

17 Jul

Today is the 1 month birthday of this blog.

It may not seem like much, but in this family, we will use any excuse to celebrate.

Another one of our traditions.

In fact, my Poppop calls me every month, on the 11th, to wish me a happy (fractional) birthday.

You know, “Happy 5/6 Birthday, Pretty.”

Oh, and did I mention that my Poppop calls me Pretty?

Actually, the full name is Pretty Sweetie-Pie.

His name for my sister is Sweetie-Pie.

Actually, her full name is Sweetie-Pie Pretty.

I know.

I love it, too.

In any case, thank you for making Mommy, Ever After’s first full month such a treat.

I have enjoyed every mommy moment.

In your honor, I will treat myself to cupcakes

and,

if I’m lucky,

maybe even a piñata.

The story of two girls, the story of two women, and everything in between.

8 Dec

photo

Where to begin? I sit here, hands tracing the keys of my laptop, but I don’t know how to start our story; to really tell our story in a way that will do it justice. It probably won’t make sense to anyone else. But it does to us, so I guess that is all that matters.

As our mentor’s mentor, Ernest Hemingway, said, “All you have to do is write one true sentence. Write the truest sentence that you know.”

And so I shall try:

I saw a girl, once, sitting on the ground of the third floor of an old, musty school building and she looked like the most beautiful and interesting thing, and I was desperate, instantly, to get close to her.

***

I have written many stories on here, about my childhood and adulthood and parenthood, about things joyful and sorrowful and fanciful, but there is one piece of my life that I have left almost untouched.

I did not have a traditional college experience. I started off attending the Honors Program of a big state school, so that I had tiny, elite classes, but also giant, cheering crowds of football fans (which was supposed to be the best of both worlds) and I stayed there for a year and a half straight.

It was there that I fell in love, with reading literature and with a boy from a tiny town in the Mid-Hudson River Valley.

It wasn’t a perfect fit for me, but I have some fond, nostalgic memories; of running in a storm of icy snow to catch the school’s busline, so that I would make it in time for my seminar on Jewish Cinema; of walking into crowded frat parties, with their smell of stale kegs and the feel of sticky floors and air; of being selected to sing in the school’s talent competition my first week as a Freshman; of buying a beer funnel and leaving it in a tax and buying funnel cake and eating it at Arts Fest; of watching the Friends series finale and sobbing on the floor of the dorm room two doors down, which always seemed to smell like popcorn. And the list goes on.

But after a year and a half, I left school and the small life that I had built there to travel abroad to Barcelona (where I would experience many new things, the most important being Twin (obviously).

Upon my return home to the states that May, the summer after my Sophomore year, I decided that I did not want to go back to the big school, 3 hours from home. I had just lived in a vibrant, colorful world, and couldn’t bear to go to a place where there were no tall buildings. I don’t mean to say this disparagingly. People live and breathe for the school that I attended. It just wasn’t for me.

And so I transferred, to a satellite campus in Philadelphia, where I was able to remain in the Honors College.

This was the best academic decision I have ever made.

I entered into a class of five. There were five of us in the Honors Program. It was so intimate and astounding and life-altering…

but I have gotten ahead of myself.

On my first day of classes at my new school, where I knew no one, I felt nervous and detached. I had made the choice to trade these huge, crowded cities for a mere two buildings and a duck pond.

As I had already declared myself an English major during my Freshman year, my first class was one on literature, with this incredibly smart and dynamic, dark-haired professor who spoke with great passion about American Popular Culture.

And after that, I trekked up the stairs of the old building that housed most of the Liberal Arts classes,

and I found my way down a small, corridor, to a tiny corner classroom.

And there she was.

Sitting on the floor with a spiral notebook, I saw this beautiful, and elegant and impossibly chic looking girl. And as we introduced ourselves, we realized that we had been previously “set up” by mutual friends, but just so happened to have met coincidentally that day. She was one of the five in my class.

My honors class was like “The Breakfast Club”. Really. We were all so different, but got along beautifully. There were four girls and one boy: One quiet but sweet Information, Science and Technology girl, one Class President type, studying business and ruling the school with her sparkly, kind demeanor, a shaggy haired boy, shy and pensive and incredibly bright, and then, the girl. She was a fellow English major. She liked words like I did.

And at the helm of our happy, mis-matched group was a Hemingway scholar like no other.

She was the author of a book about the “Lost Generation”, the group of colorful expatriates who gathered in Paris, often at Gertrude Stein’s salon after World War 1 (or, as they thought, The Great War), like Hemingway, Fitzgerald, T.S. Eliot and Jon Dos Passos. Note: I am oversimplifying this incredibly, and for that I am sorry. But if i were to continue to try to define the Lost Generation, this post would turn into a novel and I wouldn’t be able to see straight.

Our Professor was a personal acquaintance of the Hemingway family, and she knew it all. She introduced us to his short stories, novels, memoir…and to the color and life of that time in history.

Why does all of this matter?

It matters because this band of early 20th Century misfits seemed to mirror and our little Honors band of misfits, and learning with my class, in this tiny classroom around a boardroom style table

changed my life.

Because it brought me a soul sister.

I wrote this week about soul friends, and from the moment we met, the beautiful girl from the hallway floor and I formed a bond.

I admired everything about her, and the closer we got, the more I liked her and marveled at her.

I loved her sense of style, and the way she furnished her apartment (it seemed so grown up to me, with her fancy lamps and dressers painted with flowers and her own cats!) and her incredible work ethic. Her brain. Her insight. Her intellect.

The next two years, she and I worked closely together, as we were in almost all the same classes, and our Hemingway Scholar Professor became the mentor for both of our Honors Theses.

It is funny to say this, because I had a long-term relationship for the first half of college, met my Twin during Sophomore year, met my husband during Junior year and became engaged to him during my Senior, but this girl, to me, is like my one, real college friend.

I realize that I am in the minority, as I see my friends so connected with their former sorority sisters and roommates, but for me it was different. As I told her today, it was quality over quantity. And she’s it.

And over the years since college we have woven in and out of each others lives. There were times when we were inseparable, seeing each other several times a week and talking for hours on the phone; and other times that years went by without a date; but it never mattered. Never ever. Not once has she missed calling me on my birthday, and when my daughter was born, we brought her downtown to meet my dear friend in her gorgeous city apartment.

In the past few months, though, I will say that we have connected in a way that is so profound, it is almost impossible to describe. I was talking to her today and I said, “It’s funny that you’re the hardest person I’ve ever tried to write about.”

And she replied, “Because words don’t do it for us. It’s deeper. Ironic…”

and I finished her sentence with, “because we are both all about words.”

We have not seen each other in years at this point, but are planning to reunite soon. But until then we speak every day, and we are just there for one another in this impossible, indescribable way.

And, you may ask, if it is so hard to describe, then why are you writing about it?

And I would reply, because I love to tell stories; that is what this is all about. And this is a big part of my story. And she is a muse; a radiant character, and she deserves to be a subject of some sort of art, and this is a (terribly inadequate but) fine place to start.

I had asked her to show me pictures of her apartment, as I have always been so amazed by her style. And she sent me these photos and told me to look closely.

photo 2

photo 1-1

Hanging prominently in her apartment for the past two years are two sketches that I made for her the year after we graduated. In the top photo, it is the drawing of a cat, stretching. In the bottom, it is a girl’s face, with red lips.

When she showed me this, gobsmacked is the best word I can use to describe how I felt. I drew her these pictures because I love her and I shared them with her because I trust her, but this is not me being modest when I say I that am not an artist. I am not very good at drawing. But for her, these pieces were special enough to hang in her home, her sanctuary. I am humbled beyond words.

There are many stories in my story; the story of how divergent paths can lead you to the same place as someone with whom you’re meant to be; the story of how friendship, when true, prevails over all else; the story of two young women, who met at twenty, are meeting each other, a decade later, and falling in love all over again; the story of passion; and the story of college, and how it looks different for everyone.

I saw a girl, once, sitting on the ground of the third floor of an old, musty school building and she looked like the most beautiful and interesting thing, and the closer I got to her, the more she unfolded, and the more stunning she became.

I always say this to her,

that I am a reader and not a writer,

so I will leave it to one of the greats to wrap up our story for now.

But I just mean on the computer,

for I believe our story together has only just begun.

Their eyes met and in an instant, in an inexplicable and only half conscious rush of emotion, they were in perfect communion.

F. Scott Fitzgerald.

Have to run…It’s snuggle time.

28 Nov

There is this feeling inside of me and these thoughts that have been formulating in my head for a few weeks now; I have been trying to find the words. I talk so much on here about my son and my family and my struggles, but I have have been wanting to write about the gratitude–the immense gratefulness–that I feel for my daughter.

This is not a revelation; I started this site four and a half years ago to express such feelings, but lately I have just watched her in awe. Like last night, at Thanksgiving, when she got up in front of the room of 30 people, in a poofy striped skirt and Doc Martins, and sang 3 songs from Frozen like it wasn’t no thang.

I wrote in June about trying to be present in my precious time with my girl, and, more recently, about wanting to LIVE.

So every night at bedtime, I savor the one more minute that she begs for, because she is growing up and growing into herself, and there will be a time, someday, when I will be the one begging her for “just one more hug.”

Bedtime last week, she said, “You’re pretty mom. You look pretty when you’re sick. You’re pretty when you don’t feel well. You look pretty when you’re hurt. You look pretty when it’s your birthday. You just always look pretty.”

And my daughter is astute; I think that this was her way of saying “Mom, I know you’ve been a hot mess this past year, but I still think of you as my beautiful mother; I cherish you.”

And then there was two nights ago. Earlier in the day, as we were getting ready, I called her over to me and said, “Do you remember how I told you that you are my dream come true? Well, you’re better than anything I could have ever imagined in my dreams.”

“Awwwwww,” she said. “That’s the nicest thing anyone has ever said to me.” She is a trip.

So at bedtime that night she said, “Mom, you are lucky to have me. But I am lucky to have you. And i love you so so so so much in my whole wide heart. And you are the best mom I’ve ever had. And when I was dreaming of having a mom, when I wished for you, I was a tiny baby and said ‘Wah Wah Wah, I want Rebecca Starr, Wah Wah Wah’ and you know what? I am so lucky because I got you and you are better than my dreams.”

It was her way of reciprocating. It was adorable. And it was more.

She and I don’t get a ton of solo time together anymore; Because I am staying at home with my son for the time being, he’s always kind of around (and he makes his presence known), so today I took my daughter out for a girl’s date.

First I let her pick out any necklace of mine to wear.

She went for ultra glam.

photo 3-1

Can’t say I blame her, frankly.

Then we went to the nail salon and got manicures, side by side. This is a rare and special treat for us, and she must have looked over at me 20 times and smiled, a beaming, knowing smile.

photo 2-7

And when we got into my car, instead of just heading home (as I had done 100% of the time we did any type of errand in the past year), I looked back at her and asked if she wanted to go out for ice cream.

We headed to a quaint ice cream shop and enjoyed rainbow cones and a really sweet conversation about all of the town’s landmarks. It was so cold outside, but it didn’t matter. It’s never too cold for rainbow ice cream.

photo 1-9

It was delicious. Every moment was delicious.

When I am in the thick of things, and feel as though I am unraveling, or feel frustrated at my lack of progress in the past year, it is hard to see how far I have come. My friends and family tell me. My friend even called me on the day I had both kids home sick with me to say “What you are doing is hard for ANYONE. Look at what you are doing. You never could have done this at this time last year.”

And I had to admit, she was right.

But I have this incredible family, and the heart and soul of it is my beautiful, kind, spunky, vivacious, sensitive, sparkly daughter. And she is worth living for.

So from now on, my goal is to try to always make that extra stop. To turn an errand into a memory.

Because I have gotten a second chance,

and I have gotten a dream daughter.

And, I couldn’t make this up if I tried, she just came into the room where I am typing and said, “Mom, can I just snuggle with you for a little?” and so I am going to put the computer down, put my arms around her

and live.