Letters For Lucas

Wonders, Mishaps, Blunders and Joy.. commentary on my life as a mom in the form of letters to my son

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What A Difference A Day Makes

Posted on February 6, 2013 Written by Tonya

Yesterday there were two time-outs before 8 AM.
Today there were cuddles, giggles and good morning kisses.

Yesterday we had cereal and back talk for breakfast 
Today we shared pancakes, strawberries and laughter.

Yesterday we argued over the TV, my phone and the iPad.
Today there was no mention of electronics whatsoever (SHOCKING!).

Yesterday we negotiated ad nauseam over the red vs. the blue shirt, teeth brushing, nose wiping, jacket wearing and picking up toys.
Today what was laid out was worn and you asked to brush your teeth and have your nose wiped. The toys are still all over the floor in the playroom.

Yesterday we were rushed and late for everything.
Today we had time to spare.

Yesterday there was no nap and therefore more time outs.
Today we read books and rested comfortably together.

Yesterday there were no unsolicited hugs.
Today was filled with “I love yous” and smiles.  

Yesterday there was a lot of shouting followed by a tension headache and clock watching until bedtime. 
Today there was a Chutes & Ladders marathon, Aqua Doodle fun and dancing around the living room.

Yesterday there was a shortage of patience, tolerance, peace and quiet.
Today was completely different.

Thank goodness.

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Filed Under: gratitude, motherhood, parenthood, parenting Tagged With: gratitude, motherhood, parenthood, parenting

Home Movies

Posted on December 28, 2012 Written by Tonya

The year: 1986

The location: Banjul, The Gambia, West Africa

The cast: A family of four: mother (37), father (39), eldest daughter (15), youngest daughter (2).

The scene: Christmas morning, parents wake their daughters and the family is soon gathered around a sparsely decorated tree in the corner of their living room. Holiday music plays in the background.

With a messy head of curls, the littlest daughter squeals with delight upon descending the stairs realizing Santa has visited.

Gifts are distributed and opened. For the teenager with Sun-In bleached hair and nails chewed down to the quick, a necklace, Lady Stetson perfume and a Kodak Disc camera. For the toddler, a remote control puppy that yaps throughout the morning, baby doll clothes, a bright yellow toy camera and a Barbie doll pink starter vanity set.

Biscuits smothered with butter and jam are nibbled, as are Santa’s left over cookies. The familiar sound of a diet Dr. Pepper being cracked open can be heard at one point.

The conversation is faint, but there is laughter and smiles.

A video camera sits across the room on a coffee table and records the entire scene. The quality is fuzzy, but the memory is rich.

I was mesmerized as I watched 43 minutes of one family’s Christmas morning.

My family.

My sister had eight VHS home movies transferred to DVD for me for Christmas this year and the scene described above was one of them. Thank you, Leah for such an incredible and thoughtful gift. I will always treasure these home movies. 

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Filed Under: aunt leah, family, gifts, gratitude, holidays, KRA, memories, MSA, siblings, TDA bio Tagged With: aunt leah, family, gifts, gratitude, holidays, KRA, memories, MSA, siblings, TDA bio

Safe

Posted on December 14, 2012 Written by Tonya

Today I let the remainder of our holiday cards sit on the dining room table unaddressed and dirty dishes fill up our sink.

I carried Lucas more than letting him walk and much to his delight served him caramel and chocolate covered popcorn with lunch.

I snuggled up with him on the couch as watched Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer together and silently thanked God that he was with me.

He’s been napping for an hour and I swear I’ve checked on him half a dozen times, kissing him lightly on the cheek. 

I wept.

It is a somber day.

The fire station at the end of my street has it’s flag at half mast.

Our preschoolers are not safe.

Our high school teens are not safe.

Our college kids are not safe.

I am devastated by the Connecticut elementary school shootings, which killed more than two dozen people, mostly children not much older than my own. 

It is among the world’s worst mass shootings.

These young people had their entire lives ahead of them.

The only way to honor these children is to have stricter gun control laws! Civilians do NOT need weapons that can fire 100 rounds of ammunition at rapid speed. Ever.

I hope none of you are close to this tragedy.

Life is precious.

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Filed Under: current events, gratitude Tagged With: current events, gratitue, gun control laws

On My Mind

Posted on November 2, 2012 Written by Tonya

The trees in my front and back yard are standing tall and proud.

Many are not.

My neighborhood is intact.

Many are not.

I know where my next meal is coming from.

Many do not.

I know where I’m sleeping tonight, warm and snug in my bed next to my husband with my son just as safe down the hall.

Many do not.

I have hot water and power.

Many do not.

I drove through a gas station to fill up this morning and it took less than five minutes.

Many are waiting hours upon hours.

My family and friends are safe.

My dog is at my feet.

I am grateful beyond measure.

It is the very least I could do….

Click on image for more information on how you can donate too.

Before starting dinner tonight, I told Lucas about the hurricane on the East Coast in the simplest terms that a three year old mind can comprehend and he asked by name if each and every one of the important people in his everyday life were okay; Aunt Leah, Grandma, Grandpa, Uncle Gary, Aunt Heidi, Annabelle, Francesca, Uncle David, Aunt Gail, Miss Sharon, Laura, Colleen, Jackson, etc., etc. and then he asked if we would have a big storm too.

As I choked back my tears I assured him we were safe.

We then listed all of the things that we were thankful for starting with each other.

The millions affected by Superstorm Sandy are on our minds tonight and should be on yours.

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Filed Under: current events, gratitude, weather Tagged With: current events, goodwill, gratitude, Superstorm Sandy, weather

If Just For Today

Posted on October 9, 2012 Written by Tonya

Trying with all my might to hold on to the calm that I experienced from my time spent with my family at the sea over the weekend, feeling incredibly blessed today at my good fortune (and even better friends), a bit under the weather and slightly overwhelmed at the rest of the week ahead with a traveling husband, I have this to share…

and remember.

If just for today.


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Filed Under: gratitude, photos, quotes Tagged With: beach, gratitude, photos, quotes

Since You’ve Been Gone

Posted on August 22, 2012 Written by Tonya

One of BlogHer’s 2012 Voices of the Year and big believer in what goes around, comes around, Jenny of Karma (continued) is my Letters For You guest today. Jenny’s letter to her deceased mother-in-law is both gut wrenching and loving.

Too many times we let things go unsaid and with this letter, may we all be reminded how precious and short life is.

Five months since you’ve been gone.

Five months and six days, actually. And that feels like forever, and like no time at all. It’s longer than we’d ever gone without talking, shorter than the time that had passed between your last visit and the last time I saw you.

I still do not believe you are gone.

You remain, everywhere. On my cell phone under “favorites,” even though I rarely called. In my Amazon.com address book, for when we ordered you things you needed, or things we thought you’d like. Scribbled on the Anthropologie gift card you gave me for my birthday, just like you did every year. I can’t bring myself to buy anything with it, even though I was just there, shopping for things to wear to a conference. I used my own money instead. Last year, you flew in to help your son watch our kids while I was at the same conference. Instead of being grateful, I was mad at you for finally coming to visit when I wasn’t even here.

I almost used the gift card to buy a dress for your funeral. I didn’t have anything to wear. I stood in the dressing room, tear-ravaged mascara streaked everywhere, wearing this A-line black shift, very chic, very timeless, just right for a funeral, and thought God she’d be mad if I used the money for this. So I kept the gift card and went to H&M and spent $20 and felt you would have approved. We had very different styles, you and me, but we loved clothes the same way—hungrily, passionately, endlessly.

Sometimes I’m still mad at you. I’m mad that your visits were so infrequent, that we never bonded the way I thought a daughter-in-law and mother-in-law were supposed to. I’m mad you never seemed bothered by it, when I would stew over the gap between us for days. I’m mad that we didn’t ever understand each other. Mad that you let me be self-righteous and standoffish and so very immature, sometimes, when you knew better and you could have told me. But you didn’t.

Mad that you loved me so much more than I ever knew.

Mostly, though, I’m mad at me. Mad for not sitting down to write you this letter when you were still alive, when you might have read it and understood. But then I flew there, to be by your side, and saw you looking so alive. I heard you laughing and made you a cup of tea and thought, “Of course she knows, how could she not know?” Because I felt it, then, watching you laugh with the veils stripped away. A blurry watercolor painting in focus for the first time. I have always loved her this much. Of course she knows that. I talked to you about my babies, your grandkids. I was always waiting for you to ask about them, to remember that E was taking ballet and that Baby N hated avocados. I was too busy being hurt by your silences, by the unasked questions, to stop waiting and just start talking.

Instead of writing the letter, I curled up near you on the couch and read my book and watched the news and measured out your next dose of medication. I brushed aside your thank-yous. I pretended it had always been like this, and that it always would be.

She always talked about what an incredible mother you were. Your cousin Linda told me that, in the confusing, shattered days afterward. She thought you were exceptional. You never told me…never!…and now I have to believe those words I’d have given anything to hear from someone else’s lips while yours are forever silenced.

It’s pointless, of course, all this madness. And you knew that too. You always knew it. It is only now, as I look back and miss you and try to hold the pieces of my husband together while he endures the agony of your loss, that I can see all those silences for what they really were. You understood. You could see forwards and backwards with a clarity I will forever envy, forever seek to find.

You loved me anyway.

So this letter is for you. Too late, of course, though I would not trade that cup of tea for a hundred letters like this one. I can only pray that you felt what I did. That those last moments (though we didn’t know they were the last) were enough to seal the cracks and make us whole again. This is letter is to tell you that we are fine, that we love you and miss you and think about you every day. We are trying to make you proud. We are trying to live in a way that is exceptional, and carry on the legacy of what you believed we were capable of. I promise to stop waiting, to just start talking, in the moments I have left in this world with the people that matter most.

And this letter is to say I’m sorry. For all the silences, yours and mine, that slipped away before we could understand them, for all the words I didn’t say that I should have. I whisper them now and hope that wherever you are, you can hear me.

Thank you for giving me the greatest gift I’ve ever known.

I think you were an incredible mother, too.

 Please follow Jenny on Twitter, Facebook and Pinterest.

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Filed Under: death, family, gratitude, grief, guest post, Letters For You, loss Tagged With: death, gratitude, grief, guest post, Karma (continued), Letters For You, loss

God & Angels

Posted on August 7, 2012 Written by Tonya

Tori writes Kindergarten Stole My Zen and is an amazing human being. We are connected through both grief and joy and I am grateful to have her here today with a bittersweet letter to the powers that be.

To God and the Angels,

I thought You’d explain the mess.

I thought You’d teach me before I’d have to ask.

I thought You’d speak directly to me so I didn’t have to struggle to hear You.

Where were You the day my body failed our baby?

I took my vitamins, wrote my affirmations daily, meditated, and prayed for a well baby.

I thought my children would be two years apart and in matching clothes, maybe even sharing bunk beds.

As the needles punctured my abdomen, the anguish my heart felt was far worse than the pain.

Watching the black and white screen with a baby who barely moved crumbled my spirit and made me wonder what I could’ve done to make this happen.

I blamed myself. My hormones. My distrust.

My faith was truly shaken to the core.

I wanted only to blink and see a thriving, moving, active baby with a great heart rate and perfect anatomy.

Not one with cysts in his brain, transposition of the great vessels, and a multitude of other problems.

“I’m sorry, but your baby has a slim to no chance of survival.”

I took a deep breath as the perinatologist gave me his card and told me I could go to another hospital to be induced for a terribly sick baby who would never survive.

I decided against a different hospital and went to my hospital. To the birth center I work at.

And I saw You there. I saw You in the way the sun shined through on my face during my long labor.

I saw You in my husband’s face.

I saw You in my friends’ faces.

I saw You when I delivered our stillborn son in all his peacefulness.

As we held him I felt Your love surround us.

I knew there was a bigger plan for us, but I struggled with what it was.

Then the grief impaled me.

I tried to trust You.

I tried to believe.

I cried. I took out my anger on my sweet husband and toddler.

I struggled with everything. The simplest things made me lose patience and strength.

I didn’t dare dream of anything. I was so afraid You’d steal it away.

Then, the day I fell to my knees when I found out I was pregnant again.

I told You I couldn’t do it.

I told You I wasn’t ready. It had only been a little over a year.

I couldn’t do it again. Not again.

You told me to just trust You.

I told you you were on crack!

I felt like I was trapped, but had nowhere to turn.

Except to You.

I did turn to You.

I did my best to believe.

There were many tears.

There was much anxiety.

And then, he arrived.

Safe and sound.

In my arms.

Screaming.

And part of my broken heart healed.

It trusted again.

It believed again.

I have to say, it hasn’t been the simplest of times, but it’s what You allowed.

You must have known something about me.

I must be stronger than I thought I was.

And I am reminded of the fact that I was given this life because You must have thought I was strong enough to live it.

So for that, I thank You.

Follow Tori on Twitter and Pinterest.

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Filed Under: gratitude, grief, Letters For You, life Tagged With: gratitude, grief, guest post, Kindergarten Stole My Zen, Letters For You, life

Giving Thanks

Posted on July 15, 2012 Written by Tonya

All the items I included on my list last week as things I will miss when I’m gone (Ode to Nora Ephron) should be what I’m thanking this week. Instead, I have a different list (in no particular order):

1. Thank you, green lights. You instantly put me in a good mood.

2. Thank you, 8:00 PM. It’s not quite Lucas’ bedtime and as long as he’s not fighting it, he is all cuddles and snuggles.

3. Thank you, books. There is nothing like getting lost inside the pages of an epic saga, falling in love with the heroes and villains and letting my imagination run wild.

4. Thank you, first sip of wine after a very rough day. Sometimes a sip is all I need for that sweet release.

5. Thank you to the expression on Lucas’ face the moment he first sees me when I come pick him up from preschool. It is absolutely priceless. I love my son more than life itself.

6. Thank you to my husband who knows exactly when I need a break, a hug or swift kick in the ass. I honestly could not have a better partner.

7. Thank you to my parents for showing me the world (literally) and what it means to be a good, hardworking person. The honor was all mine.

8. Thank you, Dave Matthews. Your music has gotten me through some of both the best and worst times of my life and every time I hear your voice, I’m immediately calmed, hopeful or happy.

9. Thank you, writing for providing the best outlet I know for expressing myself. Starting Letters For Lucas and joining the blogging community has been one of the very best and most surprising things I have ever done for myself. I learn something new almost every day and I live for the interaction. My blog is my therapy. And WAY cheaper.

10. Thank you, brain for finally slowly down enough to let me rest each night knowing full well that my “To Do” lists and other craziness with be waiting impatiently for me in the morning.

******************************************************************************
On March 14 I stated using the app, Gratitude Journal and ever since, each and every night I list five things that make me smile and most of the time I post my lists on Twitter or Instagram. This simple exercise has become one of the highlights of my day because giving thanks and expressing gratitude is something I strive to be better at. It truly is a beautiful thing!

What are you thanking these days?

Linking up with Stasha of The Good Life’s Monday Listicles, a meme right up my alley, because I LOVE lists! This week’s topic is THANKS.

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Filed Under: DMB, gratitude, list, monday listicles, TBW, writing Tagged With: DMB, gratitude, list, monday listicles, TBW, writing

Be Here

Posted on June 27, 2012 Written by Tonya

I usually leave the letter writing to you around here, but from time to time, I just have to address someone. This is one of those times. 

Dear Mom at the park,

We’ve never met.

I don’t know you.

I don’t pretend to have any idea what kind of life or even day you have had or what may be running through your head at this very moment, but I know that we all have stuff, heavy stuff and life is full of distractions.

I’ll be the first to admit that being a mom is really tough sometimes.

I know I’m out of place and you can tell me to go straight to hell, but I couldn’t help noticing your complete disinterest in your child as he desperately tried to get your attention today at the park.

Do you hear him?

Mom, watch this.

Mom, push me.

Mom, let’s build something.

Mom, help me.

Mom, will you chase me?

Mom?

Mom?!

MOM!

Everyone else at the park does.

Please get off your phone and pay attention to your boy.

Incidentally, that scream came from your son who just face planted into the hot rough sand. He needs you.

That incessant plea to be pushed on the swing is coming from your son.

Put your coffee aside and help your little boy get down from the monkey bars. He wants you.

He wants to spend time with you!

It’s not my job to tell your kid that throwing sand is not okay, not to mention barging in front of children half his age. Coming to the park is suppose to be fun for all of us. Sure it’s a drag when there are dozens of places we would rather be, but we are here so let’s make the best of it.

Be here.

Besides, would it kill you to engage with your child? Couldn’t you block the world out and chase him around in the grass for a few minutes? Why not take a load off and lay on your backs and count the clouds in sky? Build a magnificent sand castle? Slide down the slide together?

Do something.

Anything.

Laugh. Smile. Love.

It’s one afternoon, one hour, if that and I’m sure there will be no lasting effects, but childhood goes by way too fast and before you know it, an afternoon turns into a week and weeks become months and so on. I don’t want you to miss it.

Sincerely,

Someone who has been there.

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Filed Under: a mother's guilt, gratitude, Letters For You, my letters, outing, simple joys Tagged With: a mother's guilt, gratitude, Letters For You, my letters, outing, simple joys

Memories Of Daddy

Posted on June 24, 2012 Written by Tonya

With Father’s Day just a week ago and mine and Lucas’ birthday this month, my dad has been on my mind a lot lately. There are so many big and little things that remind me of my dad, the time we spent together and what a great role model he was to me.

My dad and I had a very special bond and I was a Daddy’s Girl through and through. I miss our conversations, his genuine thirst for knowledge and his hugs most of all, but here’s what has been rising to the top of my memory bank and making me miss him a little more than usual (in no particular order):

1. Hearing my dad drop the F bomb the first time. It was directed at traffic and made me giggle like crazy.

2. A mortifying incident in which he yelled out the car window to a classmate of mine riding his bike after darting in front of us, “That’s the kind of thing that will get you killed.”. That was 18 years ago and recently my husband yelled the exact same thing as a biker crossed our path. I nearly peed in my pants.

3. My dad loved to dance, especially to 80’s music. Sadly, my dad was a terrible dancer, but you just had to admire his enthusiasm.

4. His roots. My father was born and raised in a very small town in Texas and while he grew to appreciate it, he did everything he could to leave that life far behind him. I wonder if he knew at 10 that someday he would work and live in Africa.

5. His loss. My dad lost his father when he was just six years old, his step-father when he was 21 and his mother at 32.

6. His steady grip and childlike humor as he walked me down the aisle. Twice.

7. Blue. His eyes were kind and the brightest shade of blue.

8. My father lived in Dockers and plaid button-down shirts, in varying degrees of blue, his favorite color. As a family, we lovingly referred to his shirts of choice as “Mike Adams” shirts because you could spot one a mile away.

9. His strong, capable rough hands. He was a nail biter and always wore both his wedding ring and his class ring (seen below).

10. His chicken scratch handwritten lists. He made lists for everything; things to do, movies to see, books he’d read, bills he paid, phone calls to make, etc., etc., etc. My love of lists comes directly from my father.

My dad on my wedding day – August 4, 2007.

Linking up with Stasha’s Monday Listicles, a meme right up my alley, because I LOVE lists! Thanks to Kim of The G is Silent for coming up with this week’s topic: celebrate your father with 10 happy memories. I could have gone on and on and on with this list.

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Filed Under: dads, gratitude, grief, happy thoughts, list, loss, love, memories, monday listicles, MSA Tagged With: dads, gratitude, grief, happy thoughts, list, loss, love, memories, monday listicles, MSA

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