We've Reached the End of the Alphabet Path

Alphabet_pictures_044Late in the summer of 2007, I was rather melancholy. Michael had left for college. I had a baby approaching a first birthday and lots of other birthdays looming on the horizon. In my thoughts and prayers, I wanted the mama who started a home education adventure with Michael to sit down with the mama who just left her first child at college and was wondering how to muster the enthusiasm to offer the same adventure to her very young children. I wanted the experienced mama to benefit from the enthusiastic, idealistic mama. Mostly, though, I wanted to capture the joy for my children and to commit again to being a good mama.

Through the end of August and most of September, I mused aloud in this space. I was pretty much misunderstood and for the first time in my life, I comprehended the limitations of words. It was a very lonely time. Lonely times are good, though. They provide clarity like no other time can.

During that time, there was a dear friend who was hearing what I was writing and understanding it perfectly. She knew what I was trying to convey here and she knew what I was holding close to my heart.Privately, we shared ideas and theories with a joy that comes so rarely in a lifetime. While people parsed words and bandied about arguments, we began to dream a story. Just when the chatter around us reached its loudest cacophony, Katherine retreated quietly to create something beautiful.

Katherine took very best I ever dreamed for my children and made it so much more beautiful. She understood that what I wanted was an intentional education, rich in faith and literature and beauty and creativity. She wove it all into a beautiful package and surprised me with it one morning.

"I stayed up all night creating this blog," she said. "I think I got right. You can do what good teachers do. You can show, instead of tell."

And so it was that I was formally introduced to Michael and Mrs. Applebee. The story, the art, the books--it was all like we had imagined it would be in those long conversations together. Only it was so much better.

DSC_1039 After the first few installments, I began to write the stories, to weave the magic of it all, happy again to be creating a beautiful education for my children. And then, my daughter began to collaborate, writing stories to delight her little sisters. Time went on and we were blessed with other contributors.Kindred spirits caught the vision and help to convey it.Good mamas who were caught up in the enthusiasm of great education. Serendipity became more than just the Alphabet Path. And over time, The Alphabet Path story grew and grew and grew until Cindy designed a website so that we could find our places easily.

Today, we find ourselves at the end of The Alphabet Path. Our characters--now a part of our family culture-- have reached the end of their adventure. Every single contributor on Serendipity has had or will have a new baby this school year. We've only just begun. God has smiled on us and blessed us with precious new souls to share His truth and beauty. This journey is and always has been about those children. Just as she did with Mrs. Applebee, Emily has created the art for our final story. And Mary Beth has woven all the characters into a final story. Michael and Mrs. Applebee are having a grand parade and party. It's a celebration. A celebration of so many things, really. I'm struck by the implications of the artist and the author. Katherine's daughter drew the picture; my daughter wrote the story. These precious girls, more than anyone else, understand the gift of The Alphabet Path. They understand the treasure of a rich education in truth and beauty. Because of them, it's easy to look with joy towards the future of our real life path. Because of them, I have a good idea where this all leads and I am giddy with anticipation for what is yet to come.

(Psst, Katherine moved her blog back to Typepad. It's really pretty. You can see it here.)

Friendship, Gratitude, and Blogs, Oh My!

Last night, I went to bed thinking about Charlotte's thoughtful post.  I'm still thinking about those lines from Amy's blog and Ann's blog. And I'm thinking about my day of relative quiet yesterday, away from the chattering noise.

I've never been much of a chatterer. Too serious, perhaps. Or too shy. Or too introverted. Or perhaps it's just that I only have one ear and extra noise makes it very difficult for me to hear what's really important. I'm a deliberate, focused listener from way back.

I had two friendly conversations yesterday and I'm still giggling at God's plan for the day. In the first conversation, a little bird told me that another bird really thought it best that I not "tweet." We talked about all the reasons and I much agreed. Twitter is a fun way to give glimpses into one's day and to see little glimpses of another's day. It works for getting prayer requests out there and that's never a bad thing.  It's a totally ridiculous way to actually have a conversation. I'll save my conversations for email and telephone calls. And thanks, little birds, for caring.

The other conversation was with a friend whom I've long admired as an excellent blogger. She is one of those rare souls who just plain makes life beautiful. Her blog was always worth my time--always offered something of value. But she, too, is a quiet soul and she needed some time to retreat and reflect. She's an artist and a poet and a thinker and when she prayerfully shares we all benefit. We talked at length about blogging and blessing and we came to the conclusion that blogs can indeed be spiritually beneficial. We also affirmed again that blog friends are real friends.

I think that some of what Charlotte values in blogs is sensitivity. Of course not every blog author is sensitive and not every blog exudes sensitivity, but I find myself drawn to the ones that do. Blogs are blank slates, templates upon which we can express ourselves. We can share the joy of life lived intentionally. We can share tough times, too, if we are honest. And both those things can be read by our friends with an abundance of grace. That's when blogs rise to their greatest mission. They offer encouragement for the journey towards heaven.

I'm grateful. I'm grateful for the tips on curriculum and great books. I'm grateful for the kick in the pants to get my house clean. I'm grateful for the deep philosophical ponderings of women wiser than me.I'm grateful for a hearty laugh now and then. I'm grateful because I know that when I feel burned out, tapped out, and stressed out, I can click around and predictably find a friend.I'm grateful for encouragement and inspiration I could have never even imagined when I began this journey--gosh, a generation ago.

Can a blog be a blessing? Oh, yes it can! I know those blessings well. I fell asleep last night counting those blessings by name. Imagine my delight when I awoke this morning to discover that the artist and poet and thinker I love so much has decided to blog anew. And imagine how right it all seemed when I learned that her new blog is named evoglia~the Greek word for blessing.

Go visit. Be blessed!

(Be sure not to miss this.)

I Was a Better Mother Before the Internet

Charlotte_mason_summer_study_08_b_3I haven't forgotten our habit study. The truth is, I've been thinking almost incessantly about a habit I have to change, a new rail I need to lay down, before any other habit will take hold in this house.

I got a note from a young mom the other day. She's in her mid-twenties, with four children and she's really got me thinking. I told her that I think she is a lot like me. She wants to do the very best she can with her husband, her children, and her home. She wants to let God plan her family. She wants to grow in holiness. She wants to connect with like-minded women. She wants to be alone. She's wondering if she'll ever hit her groove.

I'm wondering that about myself, too.

The biggest difference between the young mom she is and the young mom I was is that she has internet access. I didn't. I didn't get online until I was over thirty, didn't really communicate with other people online until I was thirty-two. And I think it might have been better that way. Maybe it's going to be an annual late summer ritual; I'm going to go back and think about the way things were and compare it to the way things are and try to find my own groove.

I was chatting with an old friend today about the mom I was. This is my oldest "mom" friend of all. We met in a pre-natal exercise class when we were pregnant with our first babies. We grew up together. We grew into our roles as new wives and mothers together. We knew each other inside and out. So, I began to wax sentimental with Martha and she was as practical as always.

"There were fingerpaints outside. Remember the time we let them paint with their feet on the deck and then slide into the baby pool and make the water all colored? Remember how my house always smelled of fresh-baked bread and Murphy's Oil Soap?"

"I remember," replied Martha wryly, "that you wore the finish off the floor because you were addicted to that smell."

"O.K. So maybe it wasn't perfect," I agreed, "but it was more peaceful."

"Um," she ventured, "You have eight times the children and you're going in a million different directions trying to meet the needs of absolutely every stage of child development..."

Well, yes, there's that. But still. There is something stirring restlessness in me that wasn't there years ago.

I talked to another friend, my closest friend in the world. "I think it's the internet," I ventured. "I don't think it's possible to live a recollected life and be plugged in."

"And there you go again," she said. "Everything is black or white. Plugged in or unplugged. No middle ground. Here' s the problem you're hearing with your young mom correspondent and you're seeing in yourself: you reach a point in your day when you want a bit of time alone. You're feeling needy. Instinctively, you know that time alone is how you recharge. Years ago, you might have spent that time with a book or a magazine or your Bible. You might have called a friend.  You might have sat down to write, but you would not have published instantly. You would have been writing because writing brings you peace. But now, you think you're spending time alone, but you're really connecting with all these different people in all these different places. You're getting tons of input and sensory stimulation. And then you think you're nurturing relationships, but really, it's very rare that a true friendship uses a keyboard as a medium. I just don't think people are created that way. In the end, the place you go when you're feeling depleted, the place you look for shoring up, ends up sucking the last little bit of energy from you."

She's got a good point.

My young friend wants to know how much time is okay to spend alone. And I've pondered this for quite some time. I think we need time alone. Some of us need more time than others. I don't think time spent on the computer is time alone. There is the rare e-mail friendship that involves long "letters" that might qualify as time spent shoring up. But the time spent surfing for ideas from decorating to dinner (not to mention researching educational philosophy) is not time spent alone. The time spent on message boards, blog comments, and email loops is not time alone. It's time in a crowd, sometimes a very large crowd. And it has much the same effect.

I've spent a fair amount of time in doctors' offices this week. From orthopedists to obstetricians to radiologists (and back around in circles), I noticed one thing: everyone was working. The people in scrubs, the people in lab coats, the people in office attire, no one was slinking away from her work to check her mail, contribute to an online conversation or surf for craft ideas. Mothers at home have more freedom than all those people I watched work this week. We can call the computer from its sleep mode "just for a minute" to do any or all of the above tasks and no boss is going to frown upon the habit (or worse). But a habit it becomes and a minute becomes ten or twenty and then we go from just clicking and reading and  start to write a response and suddenly the afternoon is gone. Or we don't write a response, but we arise from our chairs troubled by something we read and we hold it in our heads as we go about our daily rounds, and we wonder why we feel frazzled.

"I just want to bake bread and wash the floor," I insisted again to Martha.

"You are allergic to wheat and Christian washes the floor now, " she reminded me.

Slowly, I recognize that it's not the bread or the soap or even the paints (though I intend to do that with my little ones tomorrow). It's the quiet thoughts I carried in my head while I did those things.

Mothers were made to nurture. We nurture babies. We nurture little girls who look to us as examples of what they are to become. We nurture restless teenaged boys. We nurture young adults who are boldly going forth in the world. We nurture a love with a man who is called away from us and into the world in order to provide for our basic needs. Mostly, we nurture relationships. And real relationships require thoughtful time and attention. They can't be a click away. They require the investment of energy and understanding. They require prudence and forgiveness and genuine charity. It is true that in our lifetimes we might find one or two of those friendships online. But that is all. Just one or two. And those friendships will more than likely grow and flower over much time and many long, thoughtful letters and many more phone conversations. They will not remain confined to the screen and the keyboard. 

Most of our genuine friendships, most of the contacts that will fill us rather than deplete us, are the ones we nurture face to face and the ones where we are nurtured in return. They'll be the friends who watch your first baby when you go to the hospital to give birth to the second. They'll be the friends who sit in stunned silence at playgroup while the doctor on the phone tells you that you must arrange for a CT scan immediately. And they'll be there when your hair is falling out and you need a second opinion on a wig. They'll help you move and set up housekeeping in your new house. They'll be the extra set of hands you need the first time you attempt to nurse both your baby and your toddler following an unexpected C-section.They'll understand how fragile you are in the months after your first child leaves for college and they will be kind, very very kind, when the whole world seems like a hostile place.

I can't tell my young correspondent how much time to spend online. I can't even seem to set those hard, fast parameters for myself, but I can offer this: make sure the time you spend is really nurturing you. Make sure it's making you a better wife, a better mother, a better Christian. Your time is so precious and your time alone is so scarce. Make it count. Make it matter.

Comments are closed on this one. I'm enjoying the quiet;-)

More thoughts on how this looks for me here: Time Online, Revisited.

Life's a Bowl of Cherries

Dsc_0551 Our cherry picking day is long gone; I love these photos and couldn't share them because I was having trouble uploading, so I just waited on the whole post. It was a beautiful Virginia summer day, not at all typical weather-wise. There was almost no humidity and it wasn't terribly hot. I think the folks at the orchard easily could have opened the groves for picking about five days eariler. We arrived to find far too many cherries molding on the trees. We were careful to instruct our little pickers (and the pbig ones too) about which cherries to pick and which to leave alone.  The toddlers were indiscriminate and Marisa and I found ourselves devoting most of our time to pitting cherries for increasingly stained one-year-old girls.It was interesting to see how the children's personalities emerged in the cherry trees. Gracie stooDsc_0565_2d timidly in front of a tree and was helpless to do much of anything unless Katie did it first and then pushed Gracie along. Katie scrambled up trees fearlessly (a little too fearlessly) and was much more interested in the challenge of the climb than filling her bag. Ever the fashionista, she was pleased with her cherry-printed shirt and more than happy to pose for picture after picture. She did her fair share of eating ,too.
Nicholas was all seriousness and filled his bag with methodical precision. KnowingDsc_0541 him, he probably counted cherries as he went.  Stephen and Sam made it a friendly competition. They climbed tree after tree and filled bags until they literally burst. The big girls wandered off to find a single tree of their own, climbed up with ease, and happily spent the entire time picking and chatting. Chatting and picking. Ever so happy to be outside on a glorious day, happy the cherries were ripe and sweet, happiest of all to have time in a tree with a kindred spirit. And the teenaged boys--they were all business. They helped Gracie in and out of trees and picked her cherries for her. And they managed to fill some bags of their own. I picked a fair number of cherries, but my favorite time of all was sitting beneath a tree, chatting with my own kindred spirit friend and snuggling a sweet, sticky wee girl who couldn't get enough of the whole experience.

In Real Life

January_2008_044Way back when the school year was still in the planning stages, Rebecca and I decided that we'd brainstorm together for "Tea and a Craft" ideas. We both agreed that we wanted the simplicity of a tea time and craft activity suitable to active boys and busy girls. And we both knew that Dawn's archives was a treasure trove of simple, yet meaningful afternoons throughout the liturgical year. So, we figured we'd start there and add and tweak as the year went along, bouncing ideas off each other and enjoying the synergy of friendship. We also knew that we wanted to add a good bit of beauty and, particularly, handicrafts, to our children's lives. So, those plans were "written in" as well (they were actually keyboarded and sent back and forth in endless emails and blogged a bit, too).
We've been sharing most of our learning plans, sending books back and forth between Virginia and Ohio for perusal, and chatting often on the phone. Rebecca's also been on an inspiring de-cluttering tear of late, and it's rubbed off a bit on me. With some other friends, we're talking about how to discern the  the best when you are surrounded by too much that is good, but not necessarily holy. And a dozen times a month or more, I'd have these planning conversations or clutter conversations or knitting conversations with Rebecca and I'd whine a little bit. "If only you were here, this would all be so much better!" And so, on a week that was destined to be gloomy (Michael went back to school and Mike left for the Super Bowl), God smiled on me and a minivan Gypsy Caravan pulled up at my house! We drank endless cups of tea and talked and talked and talked. Our children got to know one another. We sorted through my books and gathered bags and boxes of giveaways (aren't I the most gracious hostess?). We actually did one of those tea and craft ideas of Dawn's together! We made orange snowballs and had orange spiced tea in honor of Our Lady of Altagracia. All the children made pretty bookmarks with an orange theme and an image of Our Lady.In real life. Both of our families together in one place.
January_2008_045 And, wonder of wonder, Rebecca taught us to knit. I still don't know how to purl, but Mary Beth does and she has actually finished two washcloths since Rebecca's departure.
I am grateful for the internet. In the nine years since I've been online, I've met so many good people and learned so many good things. I am also painfully aware of the pitfalls of the internet. I know how limiting an online friendship can be and how necessary the human voice and--better yet--the human touch is for a true friendship of trust and understanding. Computers are such a gift and can be such a blessing for our families and the world of blogging and message boards can be a place of community and friendship. This is an unprecedented world, though, one where we tread a bit cautiously as we seek to understand the limitations and the pitfalls of relationships begun in cyberspace. I'm still new at this, but I think the key to true and deep friendships is that both parties are real. If blogs and emails are "the real deal" and phone calls and letters and packages reveal even more of the real person, then the in-real-life transition is not a surprise at all. Instead, it's a blessing and relief. At last, we are able to see and hear and touch all at the same time. And we can revel in the easy companionship of an in real life and forever friend.God bless Rebecca!