To: The Dear One on Your Way Home for a College Holiday

Re: Managing Expectations

I have been counting the days until you return. I’ve missed having you woven into the dailiness of life in our house. You’ve been so busy, especially these last few weeks. At the beginning of the semester, everything was new. You navigated new places to eat, and sleep, and study. You met hundreds of new people at a time. Living away from home, you learned so many things about life in the world; you’ve been fully responsible for your daily life. And of course, you learned a lot of things taught to you in lecture halls and between the pages of a book. You’re tired. I hereby promise that even though I want to talk with you and hear all about all the things (and solicit your help with kitchen duties and Christmas lights), I will bide my time and recognize that what you want most in the world at first is just to sleep — in your own bed or in the corner of  the couch you wore into the shape of you during high school. I’ll let you sleep. And then, let’s catch up.

Late nights studying, added stress, crowded planes and trains to get home; you may walk through the door feeling quite ill. I won’t be surprised. Though I surely hope you will stay well, if you are sick, we’ll adapt. You’ve been working hard (and probably playing hard, too), and it takes its toll. I’ll remember that and help you heal. I’ll feed you well, and offer you a break from institutional food that doesn’t quite nourish the same way homecooked meals do, no matter how good the meal plan.

I know that just as I’ve been counting the days until I see you, you have been counting the days until you can hang out with your high school friends. Let’s strike a balance, shall we? I won’t take it personally when you want the keys to the car almost as soon as you’ve arrived, if you will take a moment to sort your laundry before you go. And as we settle into the season, remember that I’ve missed your friends, too. Invite them to our house. I’d love to see them again.

While we’re talking about the car and going out, please remember that this is not a college campus. The people who live here get up in the morning to go to work, or they have work to do at home. They go to sleep at reasonable times and wake before the workday begins. We also eat in the kitchen, put the toilet seat down, put dirty clothes in the hamper and clean clothes in the closet. It might take us both more than a minute to get used to sharing space again. When (if) alcohol is served, it accompanies the rest of the evening’s food and entertainment. It isn’t the star of the show. I guess what I’m saying is that this is our home, and we function a bit differently here than from where you’ve come. Please bear that in mind as you re-enter our world and adjust as needed to being at home again. We can talk about old curfews and new considerations. There’s a way for us all to grow together, especially if you don’t assume that none of the old habits are necessary any longer. Some of those habits are just part of living together well. They’re here for the long haul.

This is not my first time to welcome someone home. I learn something new every time. One thing is certain: that college break goes by in a blink, and I’ll be sad when it’s time to hug you goodbye again. What I want you to know before it even begins is that sometimes I let my idealistic notions of the perfect holiday get between me and you. This time, my plan is to let experience temper my expectations, to let go of the ideal, and to cherish every moment of the real time I have with you.

I am so glad you’re coming home!

Love,

Mom

How Things Are Here

Mike and I went to a very early Mass last Sunday. We live in a diocese that observes the Ascension on Thursday, so our readings were for the seventh Sunday of Easter. As I listened to the readings, and then to an excellent homily, I could not shake the feeling that this week, in particular, they were spoken straight to me in preparation for what the week would hold. Our deacon zoomed in on the second reading. He said that sometimes our suffering is of our own making; we make poor choices and natural law means there will be sad consequences. But sometimes, we suffer through no “fault” of our own. Sometimes, we suffer because we believe in Christ and we believe that followers of Christ should both seek his will and behave as he would. I may ask the deacon for notes; it was just that good. It was also the preface to a week that proved to begin a new chapter in our lives. 

On Tuesday morning, about an hour after he left for work, Mike called to say he was on his way home. He said he’d been laid off and he was ten minutes away. He told me he wanted to give me a heads-up so that I could collect myself. Then he asked if I needed more time. Apparently, he really wanted to be sure I was collected when he got home.

I did not need more time. I had time enough to call one friend and ask for prayers that I would be calm and wise and wholly in God’s will. 

After decades of loyal service to his company, my husband was let go in a downsizing. I’m not terribly surprised. Nothing has surprised me lately, because everything has surprised me for three years. Almost three years to the day that we closed on our house in Connecticut, he was losing the job for which we moved. And in those three years, nearly every day, that job was a challenge to what he believed to be right and good and true. A company he once loved and for which he’d sacrificed so much was caught up in the current tidal wave of wokeism, and despite his best efforts, Mike could no longer hold back the surge. 

After he arrived, we sat in the garden and talked for a few minutes, then gathered the four children at home for a family meeting. He was a man who’d been liberated at last from a job that was slowly choking him. Despite all the uncertainty, there was a palpable sense of relief. Finally, he would be relieved of the daily pummeling that “the other cheek” has endured since we got here.

All is not sunshine and roses. We do love our life here. Our children are settled. We have community we cherish. And our son and his wife and their five children are woven into our daily lives. We want to stay. Maybe we can. Maybe we can’t. He spent the whole day on the phone yesterday, and the calls continue today. 

I keep returning to the spot pictured above, stopping to pray, “Just keep us on the narrow path, safe inside your holy will.” That is my only true want right now. It’s been three unspeakably difficult years. My eyes have been opened to the culture in ways I could never have imagined. But God has been so faithful. He’s carried us through some agonizing sufferings. He has shown us how necessary the grace of the sacrament of marriage is, and he has shown us that he is truly present in it. We are three. Every hard bump along the way, every exhausting, sleepless night in the last three years–he used them all to get us ready for today. 

I didn’t even need ten minutes:-). I just stood there on that brick walk, asked someone to cover me in prayer, and met Mike there, fully confident that whatever this new wrinkle brings, God’s grace is sufficient.

That said, I hate surprises. I love to know the plan. And I need order. So on Tuesday, after we talked to the kids at home, Nick made a tee time and took his dad golfing. I stayed home and cleaned things. We all have our ways of coping…

When my sister calmly suggested that maybe I could stop vacuuming, I turned to a project Micaela and I have been quietly working on for some time. There are plans to bring Take Up &  Read into the fullness of the vision we had for it from the beginning: a mentoring and coaching site that will serve Catholic women in a healthy and holistic way. Now that Mike is going to be around all day every day, maybe we can move that launch date up a little. 

I also checked in with Beautycounter to see if I could get a beat on what June will hold. Beautycounter has been a blessing in more ways than one these couple of years. It’s kept the lights on here on the ‘net and paid for educational opportunities for me and been such a push in the right direction at just the right moment. And in the face of some economic uncertainty, I wanted to see what this little business opportunity holds in the immediate future. There is that new lipstick, and a new product that promises to make us all look bright and beautiful by autumn. And–the thing I was most interested in having been so recently kicked in the teeth by the culture–there is very little reliable information on how and when and whether rainbows will be ominous beacons of things unintended by God next month. I have been sharing a product I love, believing in a company that promotes good health.

I am weary and watchful and so-not-woke. I’m praying that June is not political. But I don’t know. I truly don’t know. Perhaps, this too, will fall away, because the way of Christ is really very narrow, isn’t it?

For now, there’s a chance to try the new lipstick and snag a really great-smelling shower gel for dad (and for you too, because let’s be honest, it’s really nice when they smell good). There’s a gift with purchase offer to celebrate the holiday weekend. As always, but maybe a bit more poignantly today, your new lipstick blesses my family. 

Thanks for listening, for your prayers, and for your friendship.

Friends & Family, Indeed

Hi, there!

I’m writing late Tuesday afternoon, with plans to post right after Nick’s midnight medication dosing.

I’ve been here in Virginia for over a week now, and Nick’s recovery has been bumpy at best. The tentative plan is for Mike and me to switch tomorrow. We haven’t seen each other all month ,with the exception of a couple of hours. And I’m not sure we’ll see each other tomorrow. We might just pass each other in Pennsylvania somewhere.

I got word today (or maybe yesterday—I’m not sure because time is the calendar is blurred vagueness currently) that the Beautycounter big Friends & Family event starts tomorrow. And I wondered something like “Huh. How am I going to do this from the hospital? Or the car? Or wherever I am that I don’t know about right now?”

And then I remembered that two years ago, this is how my very unlikely Beautycounter story began. It was Stephanie who was in the hospital with her son, and I agreed to give Beautycounter a try because I would have done whatever she asked at that moment.

It turns out that I thought I was doing a favor, but God knew he was offering provision. I was surprised by my first paycheck; I hadn’t really considered a paycheck at all. What an unexpected blessing. I’ve taken commission money and poured it into Take Up & Read. Mostly, I’ve invested in education, in preparing me to better serve you. And then, there is infrastructure. You should start seeing some significant value-added changes very soon, including opportunities for life-changing coaching in all areas of wellness—spiritual, mental, emotional, and physical.

All brought to you by a YES to clean beauty.

So, here we are again. It’s the life-changing April sale. Maybe it will change your life because you’ll pick up one new small self-care habit that will be the beginning of a domino effect of care. Maybe, you’re wondering if I could use a hand this week (I could, actually), and you want to see how sharing Beautycounter can open doors. Maybe you just need a new lip balm. This spring sale is a way to get good things growing.

I have no idea right now where I’ll be tomorrow. And I absolutely never text and drive—or drive and do anything else but audio. BUT you can call me if you want to talk Beautycounter (number in the footer of the email version of this post). You can leave a message on Instagram, and I’ll see it when I get home. You can text, and I’ll read it later (but not too much later). You can reply in the comments here, and I’ll be back as soon as I can.

I’m here. And I really want to serve you because this is the sale that makes clean beauty accessible and I want everyone to have some for herself.

Here are the details:

  • 15% savings on all purchases sitewide for customers.

  • 20% savings on orders $250+ (based on subtotal before discounts) in product for customers.

  • Member exclusive: 25% savings on orders $250+ (based on subtotal before discounts) in product. Available to current, enrolling, renewing, and Band of Beauty Members.

  • New Client offer: 20% savings (CLEANFORALL20). *Faith &Family and New Client offers cannot be combined. But you can combine the New Client offer with Band of Beauty member benefits if you join with your first purchase.

I can’t wait to connect, and I’d love to strategize the best deals for you. I’m heading home Wednesday (I think), and then I’m all yours. But seriously, I’m happy to hit the speaker phone and talk while I drive, too.

The Way We Remember It

Bluebells in Lincoln

Somewhere in the middle of March, the five of us who have relocated to an antique house in Connecticut were sitting around the kitchen counter remembering that three years ago the world kind of tilted wildly. Mike came home unexpectedly from a job that had kept him in Las Vegas for weeks. Stephen stayed home instead of returning to school after spring break. Patrick and Lexi came to stay for awhile. Even Bobby made his way to our house. He came singing “Closing Time” and stayed until we left for the closing of the Connecticut house. We were eleven of us under roof, I think.

“Those were the very best days ever,” said Katie, with stars in her eyes.

I gulped, scoffed, and looked at Mike wordlessly, a puzzle playing between my eyebrows. “Why?”

“We were so together all the time. No one had to leave for dance or soccer. We did a million puzzles. We took walks every day, just because, not going anywhere.”

Sarah caught the happy memory wave. “We made short videos with Stephen. And they were smart and funny and that’s when he and I really became friends.”

“And remember? Stephen planned that whole prom in the sunroom with Oscar because Katie was going to move and she’d never get to go to prom…” offered Karoline.

“Yeah,” Katie said, barely audible. “I still can’t figure that one out. Stephen didn’t exactly like me for my whole life before that.”

I caught Mike’s eye and whispered, “I remember realtors, and lenders, missing appraisals, rapidly changing lending guidelines, cleaning like my life depended on it, and getting rid of half our possessions.”

“I remember fixing the living room ceiling and having to find movers the day before settlement because ours bailed because the driver had been exposed to Covid,” he offered.

“Yeah,” I agreed. “You fixed the ceiling and I spent an entire day listening to a whole novel and gently removing teeny tiny paint splatters from the floor.” (He insisted he didn’t need a dropcloth.)

I remember crying a lot and sleeping very little. And I also remember thinking that if we didn’t have to move during lockdown, I would have loved lockdown. I remember thinking I would have tried to make lockdown so fun for my kids.

Katie continued, “Remember when we had no kitchen furniture left, so we all just sat on the kitchen floor because it seemed like that was still the place to be?” I do remember that. I have a picture of it somewhere, but those pictures seem to have evaporated.

“And the house was so clean all the time. Absolutely perfect, all the time. Because it had to be, because you never knew when someone was going to want to see it. It was so nice all the time.”

I definitely remember that part. I remember both the strain and the way I poured obsessive energy into that level of perfection.

Sarah offered, “Remember how Bobby kept trying to make us remember things that actually happened before we were born?”

“Remember how sad Bobby was?” I whispered again to Mike. “And I wept with him and thought my heart would break for him…” Bobby had come “home”—because home wasn’t going to be in that space anymore, and because his wife had announced she was finished being married.

I remember the strain, the worry, the sleeplessness. I remember trying so incredibly hard to move home from one place to another. The effort was so intense that I was at home in neither place for a very long time.

What could possibly be more important? Surely, this was the work of my life.

But the girls remember an idyllic respite between their Virginia world and the new Connecticut world. A short season when they were truly, truly home. Safe. Happy together. Knit together as a family community. And it was good.

~ * ~ * ~ * ~

I’m back in Virginia for a week. Nick had urgent, unexpected surgery right after Easter, so we are spending the Octave together camped out in Mary Beth’s apartment. She lives in a little historic rural village in western Loudoun. And boy, is it in full bloom! I’ve been enchanted with the beauty of New England these past couple of years. Now, I remember how utterly lovely Virginia is.

I’ve made frequent trips to the grocery store for gelato and Italian ice and whatever else he thinks he might be able to swallow. It is a grocery store exactly like the one in our Virginia neighborhood. I know exactly where everything is. For the most part, Connecticut grocery stores are small and dark; the ceilings are low and the stock is limited. It’s so weird. It’s like a time warp. The grocery store here is big and bright and fully stocked with absolutely everything. It feels like such a luxury. I go to the self-checkout and key in my old phone number and the voice says, “Welcome valued customer.” I feel oddly—um—welcomed. Just for kicks, I left the checkout the first day and drove through Chick-Fil-A. There I was assured by two different people that serving me (with a smile) was, in their words, “my pleasure.” People smile and wave as they pass in their cars when I walk the puppy. There’s something about the south…

Am I home? Or did I leave home behind? I can’t figure it out. This place is familiar. I don’t have to stop to think in order to force my brain to make connections. The connections come in a rush. Memories anchor me, and I feel myself relax because, frankly, I think the effort to feel at home somewhere new has been a bit exhausting.

But, Connecticut is home now, too. We have made lifelong friends there—the kind of people we know will always be a part of our lives. There are familiar patterns now. We have people in Connecticut. And my girls love it there beyond my wildest imagining. Surely that is home.

What is home for my kids? I think it might depend on the kid. And some of those kids have not been children for a long time. When do we stop spending much time at all considering how our creation of home continues to affect them?

What exactly makes something a good core experience that makes one think “home”? Apparently, it can happen in a pandemic when I’m thoroughly preoccupied. I used to think that holidays were key and that it was very important to try to gather as many of us in and to anchor the experience in traditions. Recent conversations make me think that might have been a misperception on the scale of thinking furniture was necessary in the kitchen during quarantine. Maybe dumping the old holidays into a different setting feels like a dark, crowded, low-ceilinged grocery store.

It sounds like maybe home is a thought that each of us thinks for ourselves, and no one else can construct it for us.

Maybe mothering is simply pouring the best you can into raising them, and then trusting that they will nurture the relationships and the spaces that make a home. I’m not sure. When you do that, be sure not to pour yourself dry. You do no good that way. You’ll need to have a good reserve left for what comes next.

I know that I’ve learned so much these last three years about adult “children,” about endeavoring to raise children in faith, about investing wholeheartedly into home education and mothering at home and looking at life when that season comes to a close. Gracious! It turns out 2020 marked the end and the beginning of so much inside my head and in my environment! I definitely did not see that coming.

When I had a house full of small children, I tried so hard to do all the right things (and to figure out what all the right things were). So much of my parenting philosophy was driven by wanting to give my children the childhood I wish I’d had and being the mother I wanted growing up. I think I believed that raising children was an input->output equation. Pour enough of yourself and enough unconditional love into a kid, make sure he knows Jesus and that you do everything you possibly can to connect his heart with the faith, endeavor to educate him in as much beauty as humanly possible (throwing in heroic dedication to sports or dance), and they’ll grow up ready for whatever life offered and they wanted to pursue. I think I believed I could shape their hearts and souls and minds just so, and all would be well.

They would know love and they would love home. They would know Love and be completely at home in Him. And when we were together, we’d always be home.

And yet.

And yet it is not me who makes home, is it? It is God himself. St. Augustine warned that this is how it would be. Our hearts are restless until they rest in Him.

My heart.

The hearts of my children.

The heart of my husband.

We can and should accompany each other along the journey, but really, each of us travels our own journey Home. And it is the Holy Spirit who ultimately feathers the nest of our souls.

Maybe if we know that we can move with more freedom and less baggage along the road home.

~ * ~ * ~

There are no ads on this blog. My Beautycounter business keeps the light on here. Beautycounter is the sole sponsor, if you will. The gift of your purchase is has been thoughtfully invested in making Take Up & Read a ministry to serve you, and to keep this mentoring blog alive and well. We have some big, beautiful things planned in the very near future. Your purchase truly means a lot to me.

Sleepless nights and how to press on...

I didn’t sleep well last night. Or the night before, really.

Our family has been under some intense emotional strain for… well, for some time now. The details are not unimportant, but they are private. The thing about emotional strain? It takes a physical toll. The other thing about emotional strain? At least in this case, it seems very clear that there’s a pitched spiritual battle going on. Until last summer, I let myself be tossed in the waves of this hideous storm. And it pummeled me.

There were so many things. I couldn’t eat. I couldn’t sleep. I was puffy and swollen and in pain. My stress hormones were crazy out of control. And I couldn’t work. The demons told me regularly that I couldn’t show up and share God—that that would be disingenuous when really, I was sad and tired and anxious. I wasn’t happy. People who have God are happy. Or at least that’s what the demons said.

But one day in October, after Covid and before I smashed my head on concrete, I decided that as far as I am able—as much of this trial that is under my control—I was going to claim it all for Christ. Further, I was going to suffer well (and that means I was going to try, not that I think I have that mastered). I was determined to begin in my body, to stake a claim, to make it clear that the devil was no longer welcome to influence the choices I made regarding my health.

I have some formidable body “challenges.” I was born without an ear. There are some jaw anomalies that go with that that create issues. I had cancer when I was 24. That means I have lived it with the effects of chemotherapy and radiation longer than without them. And I’m allergic to some things that most people can’t imagine going without (milk, eggs, wheat). Those are the facts. I can’t really change them. But I can still claim that my body is good. It’s not perfect. But it’s pretty darn amazing. The things we’ve survived together are impressive. Last fall, I decided to start treating my body like the hero that it is. All the particulars are the stuff of future posts, I’m sure. For now, just know that we’re getting along better than we ever have—my body and me.

For Lent this year, I told the Lord that I wouldn’t let the demons keep me from showing up. I promised to do an Instagram Live four times a week, to share the gospel. To smile and give evidence to the fact that all Christians aren’t happy, but we do have joy. I made commitments to the Take Up and Read community to be there for them, even more than during Ordinary Time. I said it out loud. I never share my Lenten resolutions, but this time I did. I wanted to be held accountable.

And it was if the devil said, “Game on!”

So here we are after a sleepless night. I have a hip injury that is —there is no other word— excruciating. And I can’t sleep because it hurts. Before I get out of bed in the morning, no matter how early, I pray this prayer. It’s a commitment:-). It takes about ten minutes. I’ve edited it a bit for my particular use, but mostly, I pray it just as Immaculee suggests.

Then, I focus on claiming the day for Christ and not letting the sleepless night cast darkness over the morning. I lean heavily on routines to carry me.

First, I drink about sixteen ounces of water. This is especially important when I’m tired. Dehydration makes us fatigued, and often we’re not even aware of how dehydrated we are. Starting with water first thing and consciously drinking throughout the day helps fend off fatigue.

I wash my face. This is my cue to my countenance that the day has begun. I’m trying to be more aware of the emotion my face carries. It’s not that I want to plaster a smile on when really I’m sad. It’s just that if I am conscious to relax my forehead and let go of the worry around my eyes, it has a top-down effect on the rest of me. So, on really tired days, I don’t skip washing my face. Then, I put on All Bright C Serum and I follow it with Brightening Facial Oil. I have no idea if either of these things helps hide how tired I am. But they smell like spring sunshine and they make my face feel better. And they are one of the cues that my body reads as “Be gentle. Take care.”

I let the dogs out, and I go outside, too. I spend only a few minutes out there, but it wakes up my body and lets fresh air fill my lungs. Usually, it’s still dark outside, so I’m not getting the benefit of early daylight, but I’ll be back again later.

I feed the dogs, and then I make tea. To the tea, I add two tablespoons of a tonic I make using turmeric and apple cider vinegar. Tumeric is great for reducing inflammation. (Really wish it would work on my hip.)

I look over the notes I’ve made for the Live. I used to wait until morning to research for Live bible reflections. But, I’ve moved that time to the night before. This way, even if the night is rough, even if I am not sure I can face the camera without crying, the prep is done. I’m ready to share. I just have to show up. So, in the morning, I transfer the research notes to the margins of my bible and pray with the scripture.

Then I make a matcha latte. Coffee is not my friend. It makes me anxious and causes my throat to itch. Matcha has caffeine—not as much as coffee—and it has theanine, which mellows the jittery effect of caffeine, and promotes calm and focus. The ritual of making matcha is one I enjoy. I add some collagen protein to the matcha. I take my time and savor this drink. This is the one I drink.

I make my husband breakfast, and I carry it up to him. We have a few minutes to check in with each other and compare notes on the day to come.

I know I should exercise, but hips are pretty central to everything. I stretch everything I can and pray this part of the routine improves soon.

Then, I get dressed and face the day.

I used to walk to Mass, but now I usually drive. That hip thing. Hopefully, I’ll be walking again when the spring comes. There are so many lilacs along the way. It’s a wonderful walk!

After Mass, I go live on Instagram and share how good God is. I believe it to the core of my being, and I’m grateful for the opportunity to say it out loud. Take that, Satan!

If I am really dragging at midday, I’ll take a power nap. Only twenty minutes, with an alarm set. That seems to be the sweet spot for rejuvenating without sabotaging the night’s sleep. Frequent trips outside with puppies and frequent concerted efforts to smile and enjoy the company of the people the Lord has given me also help power the day.

What’s your best advice for saving the day after a sleepless night?

There are no ads on this blog. My Beautycounter business keeps the light on here. I’d be grateful if you’d take a look at the amazing gifts with purchase Beautycounter is offering for a few days. That life-giving Vitamin C Serum is a freebie until Friday. Your purchase truly means a lot to me.