Monday, June 22, 2015

Shamelessly Childish

This past Friday I took my brother, Jacob, to six flags for his 15th birthday. On the car ride down we listened to Imagine Dragons with the base turned all the way up while Jacob graciously organized an assortment of cards from about ten different card games. They had gotten thrown around the room while I had been babysitting an adorable three year old who was having such fun I hadn't had the heart to stop her.
I had warned Jacob that if he wanted anything at the park, he was paying for it. I was bringing a sandwich. So when we both wanted to take pictures at a Photo Booth but were unwilling to pay the price, I had a better idea. We took pictures outside the Photo Booth. I may not have been willing to pay for our own pictures, but what I wouldn't give to capture some of the looks we got! I told Jacob they were just jealous that they hadn't thought of it first, and he agreed. It sure is fun to walk to the beat of your own drum.


Speaking of which, this past Saturday when I was working in the play center at the YMCA, two young girls asked if they could play with my hair and made themselves busy turning the corner of the play center into my own personal salon. One of the girls returned with a fake stethoscope.
"I thought I was at a salon," I told her.
"And hospital. We do it all at once," she replied as if that was the only way to do it.
She listened to my heartbeat with her fake stethoscope, then frowned.
"I can hear your heartbeat," she said.
"Good."
"No, not good," she replied. "That's bad."
"How is that bad?"
"It's fast. You must be having a baby."
Okay . . .
Then her friend returns with the plastic scissors and proceeds to give me an afro.
"That's a little shorter than I would like it," I told her.
"Don't worry," she says, "I'm cutting your hair longer." She pauses for a moment, then adds, "Did you know your hair smells like cookies?"

That's what I love about kids -- they don't know what's normal and they do things their own way with seemingly no shame. Often when I feel like a kid or do something particularly childish I secretly wonder whether it is because I am still questioning what normal is and why it is what it is, or because I know exactly what normal is and take a certain childish pleasure in shamelessly doing things my own way. Perhaps it's a little bit of both :)

Candidly,
Cookie

Sunday, June 14, 2015

A Summer's Portrait

My sheets are a pile of spaghetti someone tried to twist around their fork and failed. My bed is hidden under a web of necklaces that I put on my bed after untangling them and then forgot they were there. My fish should be dying because I haven't changed his water since I got home but killing a goldfish is difficult. There's a stack of letters and concert tickets from college that I've been meaning to scrapbook and am considering sticking in a box in my closet instead. I learned how to crochet last week and now there's a crocheted rainbow scarf lying on the floor by my closet door, that, like most of my other projects, is wondering if it will ever get finished. There's a list of books I wanted to read this summer sitting on my desk by my laptop awaiting it's first mark of completion. There's a slightly damp bag hanging on my door knob from when I had to race home from work to teach swim lessons, and then race back to work in such a hurry that I had only enough time to grab some dry clothes and a pre-made dinner. No time to change. I would have to change when I got to work, and then stuff my wet swimsuit into the bag still hanging from my door knob. There's a journal sitting on my bedside table awaiting the ink of my pen like the Atacama Desert awaits a drop of rain. I always intend to write, and for my own credit, I wrote every night for the first three weeks of summer, but when I'm getting home at 10:00 from a 14 hour work day, I satisfy myself with the promise that I'll catch up tomorrow. And then tomorrow I'll make the same promise. The dead phone sitting on my bed is the tombstone of my social life and the pile of folded clothes on the floor are only folded because I didn't have time to do my laundry so my mom did it for me this time.

But outside this mess is a small plant box filled with bright orange Marigolds that my mother let me pick out when I went with her to pick out plants for the yard. Nearly all her plants are pink and purple so it was real love that she let me pick out a box of bright orange Marigolds and find a spot in the yard to plant them.



I had a thought as I was picking out the perfect spot, digging the holes, and placing them in the ground. The Lord created this earth perfectly, and yet, He has made it so that we can choose where plants will grow. Have you ever really considered how beautiful it is that plants grow from seeds that we can place according to our will and pleasure and provide what they need to grow? It's as if the Lord wanted us to experience the joy of His creation, to take part in a tiny piece of it, in order to increase our own appreciation of it. It's something I have had the luxury of appreciating every morning on my way to work. Admittedly, 6:25 is much to early for my liking some mornings, and it seems to get earlier and earlier as the week goes on, but if I wasn't required to leave so early for work, I would miss the beautiful sunrise that paints the sky in pink and orange every morning on my way in to work.

At the end of a winding road that is much too easy to speed on is the dental office where I work. There is the stash of snacks that the front office attendants have hidden on a shelf in the employee's restroom, that come out of hiding to replace the snacks on the counter that we go through all too quickly. Those peanut M&M's have undoubtedly made up for the freshman fifteen I missed out on. There is the first hygiene room that belongs to Mary, who laughs at nearly everything I say, calling it cute, and still manages to make me feel like I'm so much smarter than I actually am. There is the front office where I occasionally eat my lunch while undergoing an intensive investigation by Celeste of my nonexistent dating life, and long-distance crushes.

There are the two rooms that I set up and clean up a dozen times a day, where I help Doc with fillings, implants, root canals and the like, where I chat with Patty while we wait for our patients, and where I talk to the patients while I wait for Doc. You meet the most interesting people in a dentist's office, and, admittedly, you meet some pretty cute ones too. The other day I made the mistake of telling Mary that I thought one of our patients was cute. So then he returns the following day for a teeth whitening . . . I was helping Doc make a temporary crown for another patient, so Patty took the cute boy back for his whitening. Every time I walked by Patty's room to get a tool for Doc Patty would raise her eyebrows and give me one of those looks that made me feel like I was back in preschool. Then she finds an excuse to get me in the room with him (she wanted to show me how to do a whitening, which I'd never done before, but really, let's be honest, I think she was having way too much fun with her alternate motives). Then, as I'm leading Cute Boy out to the front desk Mary wiggles her eyebrows in a knowing question and it takes everything I've got in me not to burst out with laughter.

Down the road much further there is the YMCA where I go on Saturdays and on some evenings straight from the dental office. Through the front doors and to the right is the play center where Benjamin, an adorable two-year-old, will reach for me from his father's arms over the counter and then stay contentedly by my side, in my arms, or in my lap while we read books, blow bubbles, and play with the toy trucks. Beyond that is the craft station where Aiden and I color "beautiful" pictures of each other. It started when I mentioned that I had once dyed my hair red. She postulated what I might look like with purple hair, then picked up a purple crayon and pretended to color my hair purple. She then took a green crayon and pretended to color my teeth green. When she was through with pretending, and attempted to actually color my skin yellow I told her that it would only work if she drew it on her paper first. So then while she gave me yellow skin, purple hair, black lips, green teeth, red eyes, purple clubs for arms, and blue antennas, I made her look equally as beautiful, and together we had a blast.

On another road, thankfully much closer to my house, is the tiny pool where I teach two girls, Brighton who is five, and Hudson, who is three, how to swim. I was so afraid to teach them. You could even say I was as tentative towards teaching them as they were of swimming without their floaties. Hudson, who was afraid to leave the steps and swim to me while I stood hardly an arm's reach away can now swim halfway across the pool, and Brighton, who wouldn't put her face in the water, and clung to me desperately whenever we left the steps, can now swim the entire length. I think I've learned as much from them as they have from me. I found I could teach them everything they needed to know in order to swim, and then I would back up a few feet and ask them to swim to me. "Come closer," they'd say, until I was barely an arm's reach away. I would step one step closer and no more. "You can swim this far," I'd say confidently, because I knew they could, and when I didn't know it I believed it. "No I can't!" was inevitably Brighton's response. So I would come just a little closer and promise to catch her as soon as she started to sink. Then, in a leap of faith, Brighton would jump for me and swim. And I would back up. And I would keep backing up until she had swam not only to where I had first stood, but far beyond that point. Then, I'd take her in my arms and show her how far she had come. "See," I'd tell her, "You CAN swim." This became a sort of routine until one day I thought she could make it all the way. When she was nearing the far wall and I could see she was struggling I had a choice to make. I could grab her ten feet from the wall and put an abrupt end to the possibility of her reaching it, but save her from the panic that might ensue if I let her continue to struggle. I didn't want her to be scared away from swimming and erase a week of progress because I let her come too close to drowning. But I also knew that if she could make it to the wall it would give her what she needed more than anything I could teach her: confidence. Being in that position gave me a different perspective on how God must see us, and why sometimes, we are left to struggle, seemingly, on our own. I finally decided I had to grab her when she was about three arm's lengths from the wall. After she had gotten her breath, I told her to stretch out and touch the wall. Then I had her turn around and look at how far she had come. "Can I swim now?" she asked me. Were she old enough to understand I would have told her, "You never couldn't. But now you can." Instead, I told her "Yes. Yes, you can swim." So many times, I think we get in our own way. I do believe Brighton could have done what she did much sooner, had she believed she could. Nevertheless, I'm so proud of her and of three-year-old Hudson who is following quickly in her sister's footsteps. They are such sweet girls and I'm so fortunate to have the opportunity to learn from them.

My sheets are a wreck, my bed's unmade, my floor is an unkempt shelf for everything, my books are unread, my desk is dusty, my car is my mobile wastebasket, and my pillow is crying over our frequent break-ups and this impossible long-distance relationship. Everything's a mess,
but sometimes messy is good, like when I come in from the creek with my brothers covered in sand and grime and wearing the biggest smile because life is good.

A summer's portrait: messy, hectic, imperfect and really happy.

Candidly,
Cookie





Feet-portrait.
I think this is about the cleanest my feet have ever looked
while in the creek. It was a moment worth capturing.

Our backyard playground.
 It's like having your own jungle full of memories.
There's not a spot on that creek that doesn't hold one.

Dallin had the goal of catching ten fish
while we were in the creek one afternoon.
This would be number ten.
 I don't know how he does it.


Looks pretty normal, perhaps dull, but let me spice this up for you by giving you the real picture. In case you didn't notice, those feet don't belong together. The left one is my brother's. The right one is mine. To add to that, it may be difficult to tell from this picture, but we are standing on a narrow log about twenty feet above the ground. The crazy and clingy contortions we went through to get this picture are what make it my favorite one, because in order to get our feet so close together on such a narrow log we had to stand one legged and cling on to each other for life. Good times. 

Yogli Mogli's: a somewhat-expensive but super fun tradition with my brother's,
especially since we can bike there.

While the boys and Dad were gone at scout camp
Mom and I had a girls night out:
pizza, ice cream, a swim, and a romantic comedy.

The lake I get to run by when I take a run on my lunch break.
I occasionally picnic here as well.
New running shoes in preparation for my half marathon.
The trick is finding time to use them.