Compartments

Ancient History

Follow Me?

Instagram

The Green Hat

First snow.

We were expecting to wake to white, but it rained all night. Shortly after the kids were settled with their cups of juice this morning, snow started falling. It didn’t last long. The lawn looked sugared when the snow switched back to mundane rain. Everyone was disappointed, until the boxes and bags were dragged from the closet and opened.

boo-in-the-hatHere’s a red mitten, where’s the other?

Whose hat is this?

Where are my mittens?

The green hat!

I bought the stretchy green fleece hat with ear flaps when Ryley was a baby, nearly seven years ago. It was $1 and I was proud of my bargain. I had no idea it would be passed from brother to brother like a treasured toy or viral infections, but it has been a standard part of every winter since 1999. We have a true Brotherhood of the Green Hat. sam-in-the-hat

Tommy is now caretaker, defender, and curator of the Green Hat. He took possession last winter, wearing it smugly on bright chilled spring days, bow-tied under his shivering chin on snarling cold days. He wore it on days when coats weren’t necessary. He wore it as a fashion statement, as if he were starting a Green Hat Society as the antidote to the Red Hat Society—earnest preschool boys vs. uproarious menopausal middle-aged women.

He wore it today as he ate a waffle with cinnamon and sugar. He took it off long enough to pull a shirt over his head. He wore it in the car as we drove the older kids to school. He wore it inside. He wore it as he begged for hot chocolate. He wore it as he sipped. He wore it as he inexplicably put his cup in the silverware drawer and walked away. He is wearing it now.

The green hat is one of our family treasures. Each boy has made it his own. Ryley and Tommy always like the green hat to be tied on securely. Sam always wore it perched on top of his head, like a fuzzy green bird. Joel will probably wear it backward. The hat is outward evidence of a deep bond, an evergreen thread running through our family history. Someday, when I am old enough to wear an obnoxious floppy red hat with feathers jutting like unbalanced hormones, I will see bobbing green fleece in my mind’s eye, smile, and make my daughter-in-laws’ eyes roll when I insist she stick the grungy thing on my grandsons’ precious heads.

Just for a minute.

Good eats

Here are two recipes that have been requested.

The first is for my mother-in-law’s potato salad. I wrote about it here and here.

Mother’s Potato Salad

2.5 pounds potatoes
3 eggs
1 cup diced pickles
1/8 -1/4 cup diced onion
1/8 cup finely diced celery (extremely optional)
1 cup mayonaisse
1 tablespoon mustard
1 tablespoon pickle juice
salt to taste

Boil the potatoes and eggs together. Potatoes can be either red or brown (red ones do not fall apart as easily as brown). Leave the potatoes whole with skin on. Cook 20-30 minutes or until a fork pierces the center easily. Let potatoes and eggs cool. Then peel and dice potatoes. Peel eggs and cut in two; remove the egg yolks (put them in a separate bowl) dice the egg whites and add to potatoes. Add pickles/onions/celery and anything else you would like. Salt these ingredients.

Mash the egg yolks with a fork and add mayo, mustard, and pickle juice and a little salt. Whip together until well blended. Add mayo mixture to potatoes and mix well.

***************************

The next recipe is a dip I served at our housewarming party. It got rave reviews. I discovered it on a parenting forum. A woman named Dana posted it, so I am calling it:

Dana’s Buffalo Chicken Dip

2 (5 ounce) cans of chicken, drained and shredded (note: we doubled this, since during our test-run we discovered we wished for more chicken, so get 4 cans or 2 large cans if you want a lot of chicken)
2 (8 ounce) packages of cream cheese, softened
1 cup ranch dressing
3/4 cup red hot sauce (we used bottled buffalo wing sauce)
shredded cheddar cheese, you decide how much

Frito Scoops
Celery

Beat cream cheese, ranch dressing, and red hot sauce. Fold in shredded chicken. Spread mixture into a pie plate sprayed with Pam. Bake at 350 degrees for 15 minutes. Add cheddar to top and bake an additional 10-15 minutes. Serve hot with Fritos and celery sticks.

**************************

These foods won’t help you lose weight, unclog your arteries, or impress your friends at MENSA. They will taste yummy, though.

The tender hours

I wrote the following essay in April of 1999. Several months later I submitted it to a contest sponsored by MOPS, but it wasn’t chosen. This essay has always been one of my favorites.

The tender hours of the morning, young as my new son nursing, are not lonely hours. My home is quiet. The two of us are propped by pillows on the couch. One light is on. He is warm and his body is a little crescent curving around me as he intently nurses. We feel safe, and not at all alone.

My imagination, still a little dewy from an interrupted dream, rises through the ceiling, out the roof, and aloft over the stillness of our town. I look at the lights that are scattered below me. To the eastern mesa, to the plateau that banks the north, around in a circle my eyes sweep the ground. The lights are tiny, mirroring the stars above, yet they are few on this windy night.

If I were an angel, I could drift down and quietly observe this community of the tender hours.

My son and I, cradled together in our home, feel safe and not at all alone. Up in the night air an imagination can see all of the tiny lights and all of the mothers and babies who curl together in a hushed glow. Some mothers sing old songs into the curve of nibbled new ear. Others sway and dance, mother’s feet light under baby’s weight in her arms. Many babies hold a finger or a lock of hair as they swallow, serious and sleepy they pull closer to the breast.

Through the night we rise and settle, up into the chill of a dark room, down into soft sheets and blankets until the dawn. The sun seems almost rude as it intrudes upon the hush of an early day.
hush little baby
My son stretches himself awake. His milky little mouth yawns and forms into a pout. His eyes squeeze shut as he begins to wail. The bright yellow clarity of the day brings noise and movement, voices and the rush-around. It is rare when my imagination can soar above the restless humming of our valley and look down during the daylight. If I could, I would not be able to see the little lights that bathe the other mothers and babies as they spend their hours together. At night we are few, we with our one light and our child. My sky-high vantage tells me of my connection with all those below who rock and kiss and smile at our little ones as everyone else slumbers.

As our babies grow, so does our connection of the tender hours. Nursing gives way to warmed bottles. Soon we celebrate the milestone of sleeping through the night. Once again, the night glides over us barely noticed until the aching ear, the fever, or the nightmare rouses us from bed. A child’s voice penetrates the thickest of sleep. It lilts and weaves and finds ours ears. A child’s voice is heat-seeking, never missing its target.

My feet trip down the stairs to my daughter’s room. She has called me and she is sitting up, facing the doorway. She knows I will come. I feel her forehead and her cheek. They are impossibly warm. The flush of her pink skin is visible in her dark room. When I turn on her lamp to read the numbers on the thermometer, I send out my own signal, radiant…Here I am, in the night with my child…I rocked this child through her newborn worries…I nursed her and smiled at her dainty seriousness… I fetched a cool drink of water for a thirst no bigger than a tea-party sip… Her illness is mild. A cuddle and reassurance are enough to settle her back to sleep. I snap off the lamp-light and return to my bed.

But sleep does not come easily. I think of my daughter and pray for her health. Quietly God reassures me that I am not alone. I am not the first mother. My mother would turn on the hall light when I called for her at night. Her silhouette in the doorway, lit from behind, made her somewhat otherworldly. My rescuer. Sometimes I wanted something unimportant—a drink of water. Sometimes it was a terrible dream or a scary shadow. Most of the time it was illness. Her whisper, her flowered nightgown, her touch on my forehead—these things I remember as I lay in the dark.

My imagination rises to the crest of the sky. I can see the lights of the earth. I do not know the year or the cities I see. There are lanterns, campfires, candles, and neon signs. There is my mother’s light, and my great-great grandmother’s. Is that soft pink light my daughter’s? My valley, in my time, is small when I can see so enormous a blazing scene. The earth appears to be on fire. It is the love, the light of all the mothers and all the little ones, ever.

Such love comes only from God. Imagine His greatness, if you can, multiplied by infinity. This is what He has taught me as I care for my little ones. No, I am not the first mother.

But He is the first Daddy.