Parent Fail

7:00am the Tuesday Memorial Day. I have packed my daughter’s lunch. I made a marshmallow fluff sandwich on white bread. I tried to disguise my failure by adding bananas and packing a Baggie full of cherry tomatoes….
Sean says that I am a bad mother because I do not make everyone a hot breakfast everyday … Pretty sure this is worse.

Posted in Parenthood | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Oklahoma

I do not have live TV, only Apple TV, and sometimes, like this week, when a tornado devastates a town, I am very grateful for that. Grateful to not bare witness to the images; reading the description of a father, sitting on a stool, crying, with no word about his young eight year old boy was enough for me. I had to stop reading.

The week before I found myself obsessed with the stories of the Ariel Castro. I would wake up at three in the morning and check the news feed on my phone to see if anyone knew anything more. If the images created in my mind from a Twitter feed haunt me, I am sure as hell not going to watch TV.

Sad things happen. Tragedy happens. And I guess we each have to decide how to let that sit with us, to decide if we are moved to action or withdrawal or ambivalence. I will say this though. Facebook posts in which people say things like, “I cannot imagine . . . ” Well, that just drives me bat shit crazy. Fact is, you can imagine. And it is awful.

So, Oklahoma, like much of the rest of the nation, you are in my heart tonight, in my imaginings, and I truly do flood you with empathy. But as a teacher, I am finding myself incredibly irritated, without really fully understanding why, at all of the articles about “praise-be-to-the-hero-teachers” that I am seeing.

Here’s the thing. If you are a sane, compassionate adult and you find yourself in a room full of children who are in immediate danger, you are likely going to try to soothe them, to protect them, to distract them, to lead them, to reassure them. It is human nature. This is not heroism or bravery and even if it IS those things, they are only a small fraction of the things that go into making a good teacher a great one and it is relatively pathetic that it takes a deadly tornado or a mass shooting to make anyone notice that there is a hero in the room. What was the alternative in this situation? Flee the school and let the kids figure it out? Hide oneself under a desk and shout, “Hey kids, protect me?”

Teaching is emotional and complex and all consuming. The highs are high. The lows suck. On any given day, your child’s teachers words can forever change how they see themselves. I am, of course, proud of those teachers in Oklahoma, proud of the educators in Newtown, but I am also proud of these teachers:

Mrs. Lee, who, when Luke was seven, turned her class into a Beatnik poetry room, where kids played bongos, served coffees, and read odes.

Mrs. Loder, who eased my daughter’s transition away from her public school friends, to a Montessori environment.

Mrs. Fleege, who undid all of the public school damage done to Luke, who taught William to go to school without holding his hands over his face all day and crying (which he did for a year).

Mr. Grennier, who believed so much in Luke that he had his girlfriend save up all of her cereal boxtops to buy Luke a Spiderman watch so that Luke could feel mighty.

Sr. Carol, my tenth grade English teacher, who let me perform my research papers instead of write them, which I did, dressed all in black, to the song “Here Comes a Regular.” This was my most memorable and powerful day of high school.

Mrs. Baker, who taught me to love and to forgive mean girls named Megan.

Mrs. Burrell, who read Ordinary People with me and gave me the confidence to keep writing.

Mrs. Fritsche, Julio Pabon, Ms. Pearce. Mrs. Namboothiry. Ms. Kearns.

Sara Cortichato, who stayed after school every single night of Luke’s freshman year, to help him pass Algebra.

Kristi Koshuta, who has taken my D- math kid and turned him into an A student.

Mr. Dale, who wrote the most amazing letter of recommendation for Luke that I seriously considered wallpapering the house with it, until it got too soggy from my tears to see the words anymore. . . .

My father, who taught me everything there is to know about writing.

My mother, who picked my crumpled up home test for admissions to School of the Visual Arts and mailed it in despite me, which resulted in a full ride scholarship. She never said, “I told you so.”

I can list teacher after teacher after teacher. None of them ever had to throw their body on top of mine to save me. They saved me in every other way.

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

Instagram Lullaby

9:42. Finally settling down after a long and spirited birthday night. Quinn is next to me in bed, his sweet little cherub of an arm is tucked in the crook of my elbow. He is falling asleep slowly, his breaths are becoming more rhythmic, stopping now and again to suckle at his Nuk. Before he started to drift off, he said, “Mommy. I like you all of the time.”
He is likely the only one on the planet to feel that way, so I am soaking it up. He likes me to scroll through my Instagram feed so that he can name the recognizable images: a plane, a dog, two dogs, Lizzie, Haley, that’s me, a tree, Luke, Willy, a cake…
My feed tonight was filled with these lovely images of my children. I just stare at them and feel …. I feel, I don’t know exactly. Proud? Lucky? Anticipatory? I feel a bit sad too… Wanting to preserve them just the way they are now, forever. Their youthful faces, with lives that are just beginning, stare back at me and I begin to drift off to sleep too, wondering who they will become.

20130517-215814.jpg

20130517-215844.jpg

20130517-215904.jpg

20130517-215956.jpg

Posted in Blog, Parenthood, photography, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Thirteen, Hello Lady Friend

Image

Dearest Elizabeth,

It is the eve of your thirteenth birthday and it is nearly midnight. I meant to write to you much earlier tonight but have been swamped with your brothers . . . both needing desperate help with their homework. I have spent that last ninety minutes pulling my hair out trying to find out the difference between the native inhabitants of grassland biomes with today’s inhabitants. I struck out. Gun to head, I know.

As I endlessly searched for “at least three photos that demonstrate[d] the difference,” I snapped crabby answers at Luke who was trying to prepare open ended questions for his Friday Forum about date rape. This was all after trying to put Quinn to bed.

So for your birthday, the first thing I want to do is apologize. I am so sorry that both dad and I have to work full time. I am sorry that our schedules are so insane and that your brothers are so demanding because, you my dear girl, are so easy and so reliable and so friendly and so darn smart that sometimes I forget you must need me too. You are, my second born, and first daughter, stuck in the middle.

Tonight, before all the chaos of home (the Gilles malt exploded in the freezer, your roses needed a vase, dishes piled up a mile in the sink, lost Nuk’s, outta diapers, ah, it’s endless, I don’t even know if you ever found your backpack), our family went to your school and watched you perform The Wiz’s Dorothy. I cannot even begin to tell you how proud I am of you and how floored I am at your bravery, your confidence, and your talent.

It has been tradition on these birthday letters for me to tell you about your birth. Even that, of course, was easy. I was put on full bed rest with you at 28 weeks. For some, that probably does not sound easy, especially because it was before we had internet or cable, but for me it was a lovely, quiet, three months. I read a ton of books, slept, dreamt, and on Thursdays, Lolo would pick me up for my weekly doctor’s appointments.

On May 17th, 2000, at 2:30 in the morning, my water broke. I told your dad and he said, “Are you sure?” Grandma and Grandpa drove over to babysit for Luke and when I walked out into the night, the moon was full and glowing and the air smelled like honey. Dad got lost driving to the hospital, forgot where he was going because we were both so excited.

You were born three hours later, 6:32AM, and you came out facing the hospital window, which my doctor said was anatomically impossible. He could not believe it and even the next day came to my hospital room to say, “I have delivered thousands and thousands of babies and this is the first I have seen come out sideways!” When the nurse weighed you I asked Daddy if you were beautiful and he said, “Um, no.” (You were a little squished).

The best thing about you, Lizzie, is that I got to hold you right away. All the boys were so premature that they were just rushed to the NICU, but you? You I got to keep. I never set you down. I would fall asleep in the hospital with you on my chest and nurses would yell at me for not feeding you and for sleeping with you, but I just wanted to soak up your thick head of black hair, your orange little football face, and love you forever.

Today when you got in the car you told me all about your dress rehearsal and that even though you have always liked your teachers, you finally know, you said, what it means to have a favorite teacher. You have found a music teacher who has forever changed how you see yourself and for that I am grateful and also proud to call myself a teacher, to know the power one has over destiny.

At my school today, there was a fake car crash to illustrate the dangers of drinking and driving and we were each asked to write an obituary of sorts, to say what we wanted to say if we never got the chance. Tonight, as I watched you on that stage, I thought, “All I want people to know about me is that I made her.”

To know that I had any part in you being the magical and wonderful girl that you are just makes me tear up and hold my breath, like I am looking at the Grand Canyon or something. You are better than the grand canyon, my singer, my actress, my writer, my athlete (first place in the long jump last week!). You are better than all love songs, better than any slice of pie.

And today, your birthday, you are no longer a girl, I guess. A teen, a lady. If I close my eyes and imagine myself in that hospital bed thirteen years ago, I can still smell you, I can still feel you breathing. So it’s okay, be a teenager, grow up, find your life, love, be loved, explore, play, risk, create, but you will always be my baby girl and I will always be in awe of you. I know that tonight we will eat Chinese food, open presents, and celebrate you.

Just know that I celebrate you every single day. I notice everything about you and I carry it with me. Happy birthday, to both of us.

Mom

20130522-000356.jpg

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

This Pretty Much Sums up the Last 17 years of My Life

20130502-092443.jpg

Posted in Blog, humor, Parenthood | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

I’ve Got Senioritis

I am willing to trade jobs with you for the next six weeks. I have 7th hour AP seniors and today was the first day in the eighties after a month of rain. I’d rather work in a slaughterhouse. Naked.

What kills me most, I suppose, is that all my students have to do is draw.

They have a full, beautiful sunny afternoon with a room full of great art supplies and instead of drawing, they wander, they sit in the sun, they text on their phones, they Youtube videos, they make up new lyrics to Les Miserables, three of them taught one another to salsa dance.

I get it. They want “real life” to begin, for school to end, for long summer days where they can stay up late and sleep in. The school year, if you ask me, is six weeks too long.

Still . . . free art supplies, giant studio, gouache for God’s sake.

I am a good teacher. For the most part, I am, and I think that is why I keep doing it. I keep doing it because of last week when I saved Richard, or the week before when I saved Courtney. I keep doing it because I get to be a mom too and I really cannot imagine what people who work year round do with their kids in the summer. I keep doing it because I like to order art supplies online. I like opening boxes of new pens.

This is the time of the year, though, where I wonder if maybe I should be doing something else. If my students are happy enough watching Youtube clips and dancing the salsa, maybe it’s time to figure something else out . . . something that comes with air conditioning and lunch.

This is the time of year where if you are a stay-at-home-mom, I hate you. Hate is not a strong enough word. I especially hate you if you have enough money to decorate your house, hire a cleaning person, and play tennis. Stay away from me. I might blow dart your neck (and before everyone starts flooding me with hate mail about how being a mom at home is work, I have done that, and I still say a big fuck you). 

My crabbiness is also enhanced in that the perfectly cold, wet weather we have been having has suddenly, overnight, and without warning turned into the Caribbean. If you have skinny arms and skin that does not have bumps and lumps, I hate you. Today and until October 1st, if you can wear a cute tank top and shorts, I hate you. If you have legs as long as yardsticks and tan to a golden buttery hue, I hate you. I hate you, I hate you, I hate you.

Whew.

If you have central air, I hate you.

In the land of the law of attraction, and of how thoughts become things, and how we really “shouldn’t hate” (thanks, Grandma), I will tell you, briefly, how I imagine my life when I close my eyes at night:

I imagine a very white second story studio. There is a back counter with a bowl of lemons on it, next to a coffee pot and a sink. On the back counter is a giant wireless Epson printer and really cute things like envelopes and pens. In the middle of my studio is a large butcher block table for drawing and making prints. It has lots of paper and markers and paint rollers.

The other side of the studio has windows. Sometimes I look out of them, at the moon, and listen to music next to Greta dog. . . or maybe a studio cat. One wall is for canvases, stretched, white, clean, and waiting.

When I am not painting or writing, I can walk down my studio steps through a lovely garden that someone else cares for, to my house, which is always cool and smells like milk and clean linens. I might sink into a giant, cozy, couch (something that has NOT been handed down from my parents) or I might just walk into my own bedroom, where I sleep in a giant bed without children in it. The walls are from Wonderwall and the lights next to the bed project shadows of trees (I saw that on Pinterest, so I know it is possible).

It is a far cry from sleeping with a toddler and a teenager . . . who both kick me in the middle of the night and when I try to get up, I stumble over a toy car and a stuffed rabbit. It is a far cry from the piles of dog shit that are littering the backyard. Still, it’s my dream and when you have senioritis and you are over forty . . . it is an important one.

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

You Take the Truck, I’ll Take the Toboggan. Either Way, It’s a Long Way Back.

Today. 9″ x 12″ original mixed media on canvas board.

20130430-180322.jpg

Posted in Blog, Drawings | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

As Long as I am feeling nostalgic about motherhood…

As Long as I am feeling nostalgic about motherhood...

Painting, Remembering to Want, 2010
Kelly Frederick Mizer

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Happy Seventeen

Slide138IMG_9165

Thanks, Luke, for generously allowing me to post your birthday letter on this blog.

April 27, 2013

Dear Luke,

I am not sure if you know this, but each year, on my birthday, my dad writes me a letter. I thought this might be a good year to start that tradition with my own kids . . . in fact, I started with William this past July. So now it’s you, dear, sweet boy. Happy SEVENTEEN. I cannot believe that. 17.

Wow. In April, 1996, I flew to Rhode Island to see my brother’s senior thesis show. Jenny Mischock and Grandma and Grandpa were there too. I remember three things about that trip: I had to pee constantly (turns out it was because I was in labor and did not know it), I slept in the hotel closet (to avoid Grandpa’s awful snoring), and I visited Fred Fraleigh and held his pet iguana. I was teaching at Dominican High School that year and my principal told me that I could not miss school on Monday, so I ended up having to change my flight. The airline was giving me a really hard time about changing my ticket to get home early and Grandpa Pat yelled at them to “have a heart for a woman who was almost six months pregnant.” Eventually they changed my ticket and I ran, pregnant and crying,  carrying luggage, to catch my flight.

I returned to Milwaukee, feeling kind of sick and immediately went to bed. I woke up around 6am and could hear Dad in the shower. I could feel that the bed was wet and when I peeled back the covers, I saw that the mattress was covered in blood and so I started to scream, loud enough to get dad out of the shower. We called Grandpa Pat, who was still in Rhode Island and I kept screaming, “I lost the baby, I lost the baby.” I called my doctor who instructed me to go to St. Joe’s hospital, where a few hours later, doctors determined that part of the placenta had torn away from the uterine wall and they said you were okay. They were going to send me home, but one nurse insisted on an ultrasound. That nurse might have saved your life.

That ultrasound showed that I was in full on labor and that you could be born any second. I was admitted to the hospital immediately and given steroids (for your lungs) and another drug to stop the labor (which made me throw up and have fuzzy vision). I stayed like that for over a week. People visited, they wrote love notes to you in a journal, dad’s work sent amazing flowers, Shirley fed me pineapple and strawberries, Grandma washed my hair in bed, a nurse tried to shave my legs with a terrible razor and then put this awful Elizabeth Taylor lotion on them that Lolo brought for me . . . The drugs they had me on made me loopy and so I told your dad that if you were a girl we would name you Dakota Rain after the time we drove through the Dakotas (which we had never done). One day during my stay, a young intern came in and I don’t remember what I asked him, but I remember that he responded, “It won’t help your son.” That is when I knew you’d be a boy, but I did not tell anyone.

Doctors from the NICU came in to tell me all of the awful things that were likely to happen if you were born early. They said that your lungs would be weak, that you were likely to have many disabilities. You could be blind or handicapped or possibly die. It was at that point I requested all doctors to leave me alone, to only tell me what WAS and not what COULD be. I asked everyone I knew to light a candle at 8pm every night and say a wish or a prayer for you.

On Saturday, April 27th, I the drugs stopped working and I could no longer keep you in. Grandma and Grandpa were asked to go to the waiting room, a NICU team arrived, and only sixteen minutes after the doctors arrived, you were born. 2lbs, 6oz. Instead of saying, “It’s a boy,” doctors said, “He’s pink,” meaning you were alive and breathing. They let me kiss you and I could not believe how familiar you looked and when I bent down to kiss you, my lips covered your whole face.

That moment, bending down to say hello to you for the very first time, well that moment feels like just yesterday. I was so young and I had no idea how to be your mom, but one of the reasons I love that song Lullaby so much is because of the lyric, “Life began when I saw your face.” You, my first born, have taught me the true meaning of love and I am so very proud of the young man you have become. You are the most kind hearted, empathetic, wonderful guy in the world. I know it has been a very hard and trying year for our family and I hope that throughout all that you have not forgotten, how precious you are to both dad and me.

We did not name you Dakota Rain. Dad liked the name Luke because we had just watched Paul Newman in the movie Cool Hand Luke. The school I was teaching at back then was a Catholic school and they had a young priest sub for me during my leave. The priest told me that Luke, in the bible, is represented by the Bull, just like the zodiac sign of Taurus is. That baby is “strong like bull,” I thought.  Luke, too, is the saint of physicians and artists . . .  which seemed like a perfect fit for artist parents relying on doctors to keep you alive. But the most powerful thing about your name is that in the bible, Luke, Chapter 18, Verse 27, God says that all things are possible.

If you are to learn anything from me and carry it with you always, Luke, know that the power in your name holds truth. All things, all things, are possible. You can achieve anything you dream. You can create the life you want. That you have already found Haley might show you that dreams can come true. I wish you nothing but happiness and that throughout your life time, you feel loved.

Happy birthday. I love you beyond measure.

Mom

Posted in Blog, Parenthood, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Dorothy is Not a Vocabulary Word and Other Life Defining Moments,

“There’s a feeling here inside
That I cannot hide
And I know I’ve tried
But it’s turning me around
I’m not sure that I’m aware
If I’m up or down
Or here or there
I need both feet on the ground
Maybe I’m just going crazy..”

IMG_9245

Highlighted in blue is the lead role. That role is Lizzie’s. I am not kidding (see the post about Leaping to know what a huge damn deal this is). I am going to kiss that music teacher’s feet . . . or maybe just a gift card to Starbucks (would be less gross).

I do not know what it must be like for Lizzie, surrounded by so many brothers all of the time. Needy, all attention consuming brothers. I remember my grandma Jean telling me, “I was a better mother to the boys. They were just easier. I was not as good with the girls.”

I kind of think that raising daughters is a little like throwing newborns into swimming pools. You just figure they are going to be okay. Lizzie is one of the most determined folks I know . . . competitive and headstrong and fiercely independent (I will say the nice thing about boy babies is that they are way better at cuddling; Quinn practically sits on my face when he sleeps). Lizzie? I could keep her in a cardboard box in the backyard and she’d figure out how to build a spaceship out of it and fly the hell away from here.

One of my favorite things in the entire world, is listening to Lizzie practice her ACT vocabulary words before school, mostly because Sean is in the room, and Lizzie tries and tries to get him to practice with her, but instead it goes something like this:

“Okay, Dad. First word. Furlough.”

“That is a mattress store.”

“Um, no. Second word. Salvo.”

“Dali?”

“Dad! Next word. Exuberant.”

“That means a fancy color.”

“No it does not. Dad. Try harder. Palliative.”

“Edible.”

“No!” Unfathomable.”

“That means to be a ghost.”

“Dad!”

“Lizzie! These are all just big, bullshit words that mean nothing.”

She manages to get one hundred percent on her vocabulary tests each week, and I am pretty sure it is just to prove that these are not just words. They matter. And I think this girl has a lot to prove.

I just listen to their spelling bee banter and proceed with making the daily peanut butter and banana sandwiches for lunch. Sean says I make the same evil face every day when I make lunches. It is probably true. I do hate making lunches and believe that it would solve all teen pregnancy rates if each teen were just forced to make school lunches every day for a month. No one would breed after that.

It is still raining here. Flooded the highways so that no one can drive into Illinois. Frankly, I’d be okay if it just kept raining and we all floated away on an ark.
It is not really like me to be this moody and depressed. I am not fond of the feeling. It makes me feel like my stomach is made of bread dough. Frumpy bread dough.

I know everyone is all excited talking about that Dove commercial that is going around where women blindly describe themselves to a sketch artist. I would totally freak that guy out because I would just describe myself as frumpy yeast. All I can hope for at this point is that those women from the show, “What Not To Wear,” don’t pounce on me at work and force me to stand in front of a three way mirror. Sheesh. Maybe the rain is getting to me.

Furlough. Salvo. Exuberant. Palliative. Unfathomable.

Where is the girl in me that always wanted one hundred percent? Where is the girl in me that wanted to be center stage and singing? I kind of think she is buried. Buried in motherhood and bills and cleaning toilets (which I never do, but should). Buried in so many frozen pizzas that if I am forced to smell another one, thrown in the oven after a long night of taxi-ing to and from practices, I might choke. Buried in guilt and pressure and the never ending need for health insurance. Buried in sore feet, fatness.

I am trying, really trying, to dig her out. To let that person exhale and run around the block and jump in puddles.

I cannot read one more parenting article about how to make potty training charts. I cannot sign another permission slip right now. I cannot wake up at six AM and wonder how soon bedtime will come.

It would sure be nice to be back home
Where there’s love and affection
And just maybe I can convince time to slow up
Giving me enough time in my life to grow up
Time be my friend, let me start again

Suddenly my world has changed it’s face
But I still know where I’m going
I have had my mind spun around in space
And yet I’ve watched it growing

If you’re list’ning God
Please don’t make it hard to know
If we should believe in the things that we see
Tell us, should we run away
Should we try and stay
Or would it be better just to let things be?”

Maybe all of life really does get summed up in musicals. Maybe I just need to get season tickets to the Milwaukee Rep and everything will fix itself. At least there is some comfort in knowing that Dorothy did get back home, in both The Wiz and The Wizard of Oz, and that I scored a 27 on my ACT.

For now, I am just going to drink red wine and listen to Diana Ross sing to me on my iPod and imagine that finding home is possible. Ease on down, ease on down, ease on down the road.

kcfm copy

Posted in Blog, Drawings, humor, Parenthood, Writing | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments