Uncategorized

Easy Living At Last


Martha Brockenbrough posted a Billie Holiday song on Facebook this morning, and it has set the tone for my entire crazy day.  It was the first dance at her wedding.  In the spirit of friendship, I pass it along to you.

The first “dance” at my wedding was to Etta James.  At Last.  Of Course.  I put dance in scare quotes because there was no dancing allowed in the Methodist church hall where we received our guests after our wedding, so B and I kind of shuffled in a discreet circle off to the side of the room, hoping the Church Nazi wouldn’t shut off the electricity in protest.

Back to your regularly scheduled day.

Uncategorized

Get in the Spotlight at The Outside Lane!


I expect to see an increase in traffic when Nickelodeon’s Parents Connect features The Outside Lane for it’s Sexy Mama Boot Camp on May 22.  I’d like to share the love with you guys.

Leading up to May 22, and for the week after, I will be doing spotlights, similar to the Holiday Guide I did back in December.  If you are interested in participating, and would like me to spotlight your blog, book, column, business, etsy/cafe press store, art, album, YouTube channel, or whatever you have that is legal and family friendly, contact me by May 20 and I’ll get you slotted in.

Contact By:  May 20

With:  What it is you’d like to spotlight.  Images and Links for that thing.  A paragraph or two about you, and your spotlight item.

At:  Lane@TheOutsideLane.com

Uncategorized

Beating It Out Of Me


Tasha and I were talking about discipline today.  Our children are about the same age, and we were discussing the pros and cons of corporal punishment.  We were also talking about how much the landscape had changed as far as spankings go, from our childhood to our parenthood.  When we were little, no one thought much about a parent taking a switch to a child’s bare legs, leaving welts and abrasions.  Today?  Someone whose opinion I value on the matter said that if the marks lasted longer than an hour, today we call it child abuse.

I don’t like to spank Thor.  I’ve done it, but it usually means three or four good swats to the butt with the palm of my hand.  I’ve certainly never spanked him like I was spanked: My mother holding me by one wrist, dancing me around in circles with the belt/switch/hairbrush/ping-pong paddle/wooden spoon/rolled up magazine/fly swatter chasing my backside from my hips to my knees.  I’ll give her that she was creative in torture implements!

There are no pros to spankings that I can find.  I’m not even sure that it enforces an idea.  I mean, I can remember a lot of spankings, but I can’t tell you why I got them.  Probably for lying, or mouthing off, or any amount of normal child behavior–because I never got caught for my worst crimes (at least not until my senior year of high school, and by then I was too big to spank.)

The only spanking I got, for which I can be certain of my infraction, happened at Cinderella City mall in Englewood, Colorado.  The geography would have put me at about 3 years old.  I happened to wander off while my mother was looking in the fabric store, and when we were finally reunited, it was not happy at all.  Mom took me into a restroom to reinforce the idea that I should not wander off in shopping centers, and was about halfway through beating that sense into me with a wooden spoon, when two women came into the restroom to find me screaming bloody murder.

Those women, bless their hearts, tried to intervene.  I still remember the look on my mother’s face as she offered to flush one of their heads down the toilet if they didn’t butt out of her business with my butt.  And, I still remember my own horror when they offered to call the police.  I told them that she wasn’t really hurting me, and that I was fine, that I was pretending to cry (I also clearly recall that I worried Mom would think I really had been faking it, and might spank me harder for it.  Rock/Hard Place.)  They left, my spanking resumed.

I never wandered off again, but it had much more to do with being afraid of my mother getting into trouble for disciplining me, than fear of the discipline itself.

In short, when I think of the differences between my disciplinary upbringing and Thor’s it is pretty much a difference of mine having been uphill, in the snow, barefoot, both ways.  I’m sure when he is telling his children about how often his Wii was taken away, how many times he had to stand in the corner, or how often his mother bellowed at him, he will feel the same way I do.  But at least he won’t have any stories about spankings that broke the skin.

Uncategorized

Biography


I am reading a biography of Carole King, Joni Mitchell, and Carly Simon, and I find myself fascinated by King and Simon, and unsure of Mitchell.  I don’t know how much of this is preconception because my parents didn’t like Mitchell, so I am unfamiliar with her music and only have an idea of her as a dirty hippy, or if it’s because I don’t like squalor.  So far, her part of the bio reads like greasy hair, filthy fingernails, and body odor.  It also might have something to do with the fact that I have superimposed my friend Sheila over Carole King, so I like her even more.  (It’s easy to turn Carole into Sheila because I imagine they have similar spunky, friendly, happy personalities.  I also think both of them are quite stunning, though they look nothing alike.)  I’ve always had a girl crush on Carly Simon, so there’s no surprise I am interested in her.

I am very interested in people who are driven to pursue one particular interest.  It is impossible for me to narrow down my own likes into areas of expertise.  If I could swallow a pill and become expert in an area, I would gobble them by the handful, but given the amount of time and energy it takes to be even remotely knowledgeable of a subject… Personally, I cannot make a meal of just one thing because there is so much else out there I want to taste.  Well, I’m an expert at my son and my own motivations.  That’s about it. 

That is one of the nice things about parenting, for me.  I get to dabble in things I’ve either forgotten, or didn’t get around to the first time.  As Thor learns, I can relearn or explore whole new arenas of interest. 

Uncategorized

Babies, Baby Bellies, and the Best Parenting Advice I Have to Give


I was uploading a boatload of baby Thor pictures last night, and came across some shots from my pregnancy.  Guys, I feel sorry for Jessica Simpson.  I remember what it felt like.  I felt like I was a gigantic belly with arms, legs, and a head sticking out of it.  There was a lot of baby in there.

I have some friends who are expecting for the first time, and since I do my best not to pester pregnant ladies with advice (other than telling them to start stockpiling diapers the moment the pregnancy test shows a positive) I’ve decided to put down my best offerings here.

  1. Everyone is going to feel welcome to tell you how to love/feed/carry/swaddle/sleep/medically treat your baby.  Ignore them.  They got to raise their babies, and you get to raise yours.  Don’t let other people’s opinions make you feel bad about wanting to bottle feed/breastfeed/hire a wet nurse/Ferberize/cosleep/cloth diaper/disposable diaper your baby.  As long as you aren’t abusing or neglecting your baby according to CPS standards, your nosy neighbors can go suck a pacifier.
  2. Parenting is the hardest thing you will ever do, and there will be days when you want to toss the baby out a window, or trade it for a full night’s sleep.  That is natural and normal.  Don’t give in to the urge.  Also, don’t hate yourself for it.  All parents feel that way at some point.

    They do have a tendency to cry. It's nothing personal.
  3. Try not to take it personally when the baby cries a lot.  Remember that your baby has no idea what is going on.  Your baby doesn’t know you, doesn’t speak your language, doesn’t understand why it is outside the womb, and has no idea how to make you understand that that he just wants to shift a little to the left for crying out loud.  Being a baby is frustrating.  It isn’t you.  It’s him.
  4. Call a friend when you feel frustrated.  If you have friends who are parents, they will understand and sympathize, and they will help.  Always ask for help.  No one is going to judge you because we’ve all been there.  We have all faced the terror of being allowed to leave the hospital.  And trust me, it is terrifying to leave the hospital.
  5. Parenting is probably the most amazing thing you will ever do.

    You WILL be a sleep deprived zombie for several months. Just count on it, and make sure you put your keys in the same place every time you use them.
  6. You won’t remember a quarter of the first year because you will be sleep deprived, so take a lot of pictures and video.
  7. Show your baby the respect you’d like to be shown.  Remember that she is a person with thoughts, feelings, and needs beyond just the first three month blur of diapers, bottles, and burping.  If you were stuck in that crib crying, how would you want someone to treat you?  If you were sitting in your own poop, how swiftly would you want someone to change your butt?  If you were being passed around by strangers, how would you feel?  If you were forced to wear clothes other people picked out for you…

    For example, this is probably not an outfit Thor would have chosen for himself. Thus, I should expect that when I am senile, he will dress me up as Brunhilda and take photos.
  8. Take every nap you can.  Ignore the housework.  Take a nap.  Buy paper plates if you are worried about the dishes. Take a nap.

    Take every nap you can, however you can get it.
  9. Remember to eat.  It’s easy to forget your own meals.

    You can't have too many diapers.
  10. Start stockpiling diapers the moment you find out you are pregnant.  It is impossible to have too many diapers.  But don’t just buy newborn size, because unless you have a preemie, your newborn might be tipping the size scales on those within a month.  Buy all kinds of sizes.  You can never have too many diapers.  Ever.  Buy more.  You’ll need them.

And, as a bonus, call the pediatrician’s office as often as you need to, without shame.  They expect it.  They get paid for it.

But most of all, enjoy your baby.  =)

Love 'em, love 'em, love 'em.