Sunday, September 11, 2016

Mr. Beatty Goes to Washington

This is the story of an idealist. A young man (and his family) who sees the  bright side of everything. He's the one person on a crowded bus to acknowledge a raving homeless man and to bring him a moment of reason as a small blonde boy waves a smiling "goodbye." Last weekend, we took this young idealist to Washington D.C.


He had two requests: to see the White House and to see the big air planes. 


Mission accomplished--and quite a fancy photo for an eight year old with an old iPhone. 


From the National Airport....


to our home station Capitol South...


we rode the rails (and the buses) and made our way on a whirlwind tour. 


Just a short hour and a half train and bus ride from the Hill, you'll find the Udvar-Hazy Air & Space Center. It's a Smithsonian museum, but it's not your grandma's air and space museum on the National Mall. It sides a hop away from Dulles, and it's home to the Space Shuttle Discovery, a Concorde jet, and a Blackbird (sponsored by the Mars Bar family--for real--I looked it up). 

He was jazzed. 

Completely blown away. 

We worried eight might be too young. 

We kind of knew four, nearly five, is probably too young. 

But what better time to start educating children? They learned that people aren't always nice. Sometimes they fight; sometimes planes crash; and sometimes countries even go to war. 

She also learned that girls can be astronauts. And judges. And president. "I'd be great at that job [Supreme Court Justice]. Because I'm smart, and I'm pretty, and I already smell good. So mornings would be like, BAM! I'm ready to go to work. Oh, with lipstick." 

I'm not sure what she's learning from having a working mom, but I think I like it. 



So many lessons were taught: things like, listen to your mother, and my personal favorite, "because I said so."


Four, almost five, is almost too young to tour Washington D.C.


G," I asked, "What was your favorite thing?" 

"Nothing." We got tired. 


And totally over photographs. 


But those Smithsonian folks are smarty pants. They know what kids like. Be forewarned, while the museum is worth the transit time, the dining option (singular) leaves much to be desired unless you favor McNuggets. Though, a hot fudge sundae goes a long way on a long day.  "RJ," I asked, "What was your favorite thing?" "Everything!"


We slept twelve hours after the first day. 


And found ourselves refreshed. 


Our hotel, Capitol Hill Suites, was an easy twenty minute walk from Union Station where we embarked on day two's adventure--the double decker bus. 

Sidenote: Capitol Hill Suites is delightful. This was my second stay, and I'm sure I'll repeat again. Breakfast is complimentary, reliable, and tasty. The rooms are renovated, and the neighborhood is quiet with two highly rated restaurants nearby--We the Pizza and Good Eats for those interested. Pizza and burgers with a corner deli to fill in gaps. I could have fed the family for two weeks on what we spent in four days, however. 




We took the City Sights double-decker bus. The tour bus, I recommend. This particular company, I do not. The bus was an open top double decker--something I knew, to be fair. It was 95 degrees, which I also knew. I did not know the hop-on feature of the tour would require us to hop up and down and signal frantically to the third bus to nearly bypass us. 


We took a tour bus at night, and we self-toured at night. The Capitol was minutes from our hotel. 


Vacation mom loves selfies. Even when vacation doesn't involve basking on the beach. 

The American History Museum is one of my favorites. 

As it turns out, it's one of the kids' favorites too. 




Even the littlest of the crew. 

Ice cream refreshes on the National Mall. 

But at the not-so-near-the-end of a long day, ice cream sometimes isn't enough. 

Our evening City Sights tour took us to the Roosevelt Monument, a beautifully crafted peaceful retreat replete with 

reminders that ring true even today. 


Night photography is hard. 


Mr. Beatty went to Washington, 

along with his family, and 

even though an almost-five-year old is almost too young, we're idealists; we'd do it again. And again. And even once again. 












Wednesday, July 20, 2016

In Defense of Tiger Mothering, or A Complete and Total Mom Brag


We swim a lot. We swim so much that I can’t remember the last time my kids took a proper bath. We swim so much that our hair has developed the hard shine that only comes with hours of chemical build-up. As much as we swim, we don’t focus (much) on competition. I see RJ in the pool so often that I’ve stopped seeing technicalities of his strokes. All I see is my skinny, summer-browned little boy. But, so the story goes, RJ likes to swim. RJ likes to race. It seems a shame not to see how he’d fare on a club team. I started at about his age; and, as my joints have gotten creakier, I appreciate the ability to jump in and crank out a few laps every now and again in lieu of running.



Last night, RJ tried out for a club team. When I joined swim team, there were no tryouts. If you didn’t drown the first night, you were golden. Things are different nowadays. We arrived to find at least fifty suited-up kids. Most were taller than RJ. All of them were bigger than RJ. And, he was terrified. He cried. No, he sobbed. Real tears dripped from his chin as he wrapped his arms around me and pleaded with me to get in the water with him. "Nope." I told him as the coaches stared. "You either get in and swim, or it’s over. We’re done." He sniffled. Squared his shoulders. And found his way to the opposite end of a very long fifty-meter pool.



The head coaches had long since given up on this skinny little boy who was so obviously afraid of the water. It was clear the only thing he was more afraid of was his tiger mother, who was forcing her dreams on him. They turned RJ over to the kid home from college on break. The kid home from college on break jumped three feet in the air, clasped his hands to his head, pointed, then yelled, "We’ve got a breaststroker! Look at this! Look at this kid!"


RJ did it. He dove in. He swam a lot. He swam fifty meters breaststroke. Then he did it again, because the head coaches now wanted to see his time. He swam fifty meters butterfly. "Hey man, how old are you?" came the question. "I’m eight," RJ shrugged. "When did you turn eight?" "Last April."

"Wow." Just wow.



He made the team. The coaches told me he’s the best eight year old they’ve seen. He’s the best eight year old I’ve ever seen, but I tend to hold him in high regard. Apparently he’s a heck of a swimmer. He lacks confidence, but that will come as he ages. He also lacks meat on his bones, and the coach was quick to tell me, "His biggest challenge for the next few years will be the cold. He’s really small."



He is really small. A child. Young for his age and tender-hearted. He feels little hurts deeply, and he feels little successes in big ways.



(Gigi had a little success too; she passed the swim test at the YMCA earning her indoor pool time any time she wants it, no life jacket required!)






After it was over, I hugged him. "RJ, I’m proud of you! You did it even when you were scared!"




"Yep," he grinned,

"I’m a little bit proud of myself too."

Tuesday, July 5, 2016

Our Instagram Independence Day

Some days, I eat lunch from the Whole Foods near my office. I've gotten my salad down to a science, and I can make it for less than five dollars. That earns me a Mommy Merit Badge: the "Whole Paycheck," awarded to the Mommy who has spent enough time grocery shopping to accurately weigh produce in the palm of her hand.

Some days, I can't handle lunch at Whole Foods. The food is fantastic, but there are so many moms there. Moms in darling yoga pants feeding their darling daughters precious tiny little oranges as they putter through the store wondering what the afternoon will hold. The library? The splash pad? Oooo, maybe baking cookies together in matching aprons! I cannot handle it. It makes my heart hurt. I should be there with my darling daughter feeding her tiny oranges and making plans for our afternoon. Whole Foods is my real-life Instagram account--a brief snapshot of a stranger's day. Little pictures filled with perfect mommies remembering to enjoy every little minute with their little ones. Meanwhile, I'm weighing quinoa that I'll eat at my desk atop a stack of contracts.

The sick part?

I like it that way.

But this year, I was committed to the Instagram-ready Independence Day. This was the year of sparklers, matching red manicures for me and Gigi, homemade potato salad and mint juleps poolside.

We woke up early on the Fourth of July. I made blueberry pancakes topped with strawberries and whipped cream to remind us of the colors of freedom. After breakfast, we lead the children in the Pledge of Allegiance, and with full bellies, we all piled into the swagger wagon with our lawn chairs to go watch one of the best Independence Day parades in the nation. Our favorite entry is always the color guard, followed in a close second by the fire engines from every city. We always sit in the same spot--right up front so that we can wave our flags while we march in time to the bands. RJ and Gigi always dress for the festivities in their best red, white, and blue.

Psych! Just kidding, lol.

This year, we woke up early on the Fourth of July. I forgot to feed the children breakfast because I was on the patio filling water balloons. I threatened to beat RJ for having changed clothes twice before 8 a.m., and we took separate cars because Gigi was still in bed after having stayed up past 10 the night before playing Barbies. I fed RJ grapes and cheese wheels from a cooler (I am from Edmond, after all); and by 9:30, both kids were elbow deep in free Cheetos from the church on the parade route.

We're from Oklahoma.

Our favorite exhibit was Mike Morgan driving The Dominator. And by 10 a.m., it was already 90 degrees outside; we watched from the shade thrown down by the public library (seriously, libraries are the best--they have everything!).

We can't handle the fire engines.

It was 110 degrees (give or take a few) by afternoon; 

but tell that to a bunch of boys who'd just been balloon bombed by their parents. We fed them piles of Chick-Fil-A nuggets. It was the most American thing I've ever seen. As my husband said carrying in the platter, "You know when you were a kid, and you imagined the coolest thing you'd ever eat? And then you're grown up, and it's in your kitchen?" Yeah. It was that cool. 

These strongmen are ready to take on the world. (Would you look at the abs on the shirtless one? Gah! Someone tell Michael Phelps there's going to be competition someday.)


We got Poppy to take a selfie. 

And then he realized what we were doing. 



And, after a day in the heat, there's nothing better than the 'hood pool. 

We had a few (too many?) drinks. 



And somewhere between pool-thirty and dark o'clock, we realized we hadn't taken the official Fourth of July photo. The children wore their holiday best. 

I'm not sure I earned any Mommy Merit Badges for this Fourth of July. Heck, I'm pretty sure I'm lucky I remember most of it. But, as we listened to the distant firecracker pops late last night, I'm sure of one thing: I like my Instagram these days--even when the yoga pants don't fit quite right.